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APNEWS.COMGov. JB Pritzker criticizes AIPAC after pro-Israel group spent heavily in Illinois primaryIllinois Gov. JB Pritzker, left, and running mate, candidate for lieutenant governor, Christian Mitchell speak during an interview, Wednesday, March 18, 2026, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)2026-03-18T23:15:25Z CHICAGO (AP) Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker on Wednesday condemned special interest money that poured into the state ahead of this weeks primary, including from a pro-Israel political group that the billionaire and potential 2028 presidential contender once supported. Pritzker, a Jewish Democrat who also spent money to influence races Tuesday, was a donor to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee before he walked away more than a decade ago. He told The Associated Press on Wednesday that AIPAC, which lobbies for U.S. support for Israel and is a top donor to political campaigns, lost its way as a bipartisan group focused on Middle East peace.It became an organization that was supporting Donald Trump and people who follow Donald Trump, Pritzker said. AIPAC really is not an organization that I think today I would want any part of. Outside groups, including AIPAC, funneled roughly $70 million into six open U.S. House and Senate races in Illinois on Tuesday. Pritzker, an heir to the Hyatt Hotel fortune, called it interference.A message left Wednesday for an AIPAC spokesperson wasnt immediately returned. Outside groups influence campaign issuesThe open contests in Illinois largely due to retirements were a proving ground for some of the biggest issues before Democrats in 2026, from support for Israel to the cryptocurrency and AI industries, as super PACs poured millions into the races. Questions about U.S. involvement in the Israel-Hamas war, and in recent days the Iran war, permeated several contests. AIPACs involvement sparked some of the primarys harshest attacks, but the groups success was mixed. In a 10-candidate primary for a U.S. House district that includes parts of Chicagos South Side, AIPAC backed Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller, who won the Democratic nod Tuesday. The groups preferred Democratic candidate in a heavily Jewish district north of Chicago, however, lost to Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss. While unopposed in his own primary, Pritzker was a strong presence in several campaigns, contributing millions to support his lieutenant governor, Juliana Stratton, in her successful bid for the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination. The move, and Pritzkers possible 2028 presidential bid, put a fresh spotlight on his global policy views amid growing unrest over the Democratic Partys relationship to Israel.A supporter of Israel, Pritzker has also rejected the leadership of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He has called for two-state solution with safe havens needed both for Jews in Israel and Palestinians in Gaza.I do not know why the United States has walked away from that, except, of course, that Donald Trump doesnt seem to understand how to create Middle East peace and instead wants to go to war, as he has now done in Iran, simply following Netanyahu into that war, Pritzker said.Are we going to now take military adventures across the world to take out leaders, who we think are bad for their countries? he said. If so, were going to be involved in a whole lot of wars going forward. Millions into races from Pritzker, outside groupsPritzker himself put at least $5 million into helping Stratton get elected. She won the Democratic Senate nomination over U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, who dominated in fundraising.Outside groups also spent more than $16 million to support Strattons campaign, while also spending $11 million in opposition.Pritzker said Stratton won because she was strong on issues, not because of his influence.She stood on her own two feet, and people saw that shes real and shes going to be a fighter for us in Washington, Pritzker said.Some voters disagreed. Matthew Crain, 54, who is from downstate Chatham, said Pritzkers endorsement influenced him to change his vote from Krishnamoorthi to Stratton.I thought with potential future running for president, I thought having one of his allies in would be a good thing, said Crain, a state worker.Brooke Morgan, 39, from Springfield, said she became familiar with Strattons politics over her last seven years as lieutenant governor.The governor is doing a pretty good job in Illinois, and I think that his backing, his support of her certainly gave me some confidence as well, said Morgan, a museum curator. Eyes on NovemberIn November, Pritzker faces Republican Darren Bailey, a former state lawmaker who backs Trumps agenda. It will be a rematch after Pritzker handily defeated Bailey in 2022.In a campaign speech to supporters Tuesday, Bailey, who received Trumps endorsement four years ago, said he doesnt agree with the president on everything and vowed to include Democrats who feel left out.Meanwhile in a campaign ad posted Wednesday, Pritzkers team characterized Bailey as still too extreme for Illinois. When asked about his own ambitions for higher office, Pritzker said he is not planning anything beyond his 2026 bid for a third term.That is not something Im thinking, he said.___Associated Press writer John OConnor in Springfield, Illinois, contributed to this report.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 19 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMA landmark WNBA labor deal nears reality, paving the way for the first million dollar playersThe WNBA logo is seen near a hoop before an WNBA basketball game at Mohegan Sun Arena, May 14, 2019, in Uncasville, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill, File)2026-03-18T18:20:42Z NEW YORK (AP) A landmark new WNBA collective bargaining agreement was reached in principle early Wednesday morning that will give the league its first million dollar players.Theres still a lot of work to do between now and the start of the regular season on May 8, however.Lawyers on both sides are finalizing the term sheet for players and the leagues Board of Governors to approve, which should be done in the next day or so. The union will have informational sessions with its players to walk them through key terms, answer questions and make sure they understand what the deal means for them. It will then get put to a vote with a majority needed to ratify the CBA. The leagues Board of Governors will then need to approve the deal before it becomes official.Then the sprint to the start of the season begins. Expansion draftFirst up will be the expansion draft for the two new teams Toronto and Portland. Rules regarding who the current teams will be able to protect and how the draft will work are still being figured out. The draft is expected to take place right around the Final Four.The league had an expansion draft last year for the Golden State Valkyries, but that was just one team and most of the players werent free agents.The 13 other teams will submit a list of players they are protecting to the Tempo and Fire, who will then figure out who they will chose. Free agency and college draftMore than 80% of the league are free agents this year as players had signed deals that were going to expire last year. There are only two veteran players that arent under rookie contracts who are signed for this season.The teams will need to understand the new CBA in realtime to figure out deals. Usually teams have a few weeks to court free agents to join their franchise and that time will be most likely cut in half. The front offices of teams will have only days to decide which restricted free agents to extend offers to and which one to give a franchise tag. Theres a chance that many players may just re-sign with their current teams for a year and then revisit free agency a year later. They also could go after the money and accept a bigger contract from a team they might not know as much about. The college draft is scheduled for April 13 in New York. Franchises have been doing their due diligence on draft eligible college players over the last few months. With so much turnover in rosters potentially with free agency movement, players could rise or fall on the draft board based on franchises having different needs.Training camps openTeams will start training camp on April 19 and will have little time to get prepared for the regular season. There are five new coaches in the league who will be implementing their own systems as well as the potentially large movement of free agents. There also could be major roster turnover so players will have to get accustomed to each other. Theres a marquee game on April 25 in New York with Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever facing the Liberty.League businessOff the court, the WNBA has a lot to do before the season tips off. The league is celebrating its 30th anniversary with a whole host of activities. Theres also new sponsorship deals to announce and broadcast schedules to put out.___AP WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 18 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NATURE.COMBrains protective barrier stays leaky for years after playing contact sportsNature, Published online: 18 March 2026; doi:10.1038/d41586-026-00885-2Damage to the blood-brain barrier is linked to immune changes and cognitive decline.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 21 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.NATURE.COMDaily briefing: China approves world-first braincomputer interface deviceNature, Published online: 17 March 2026; doi:10.1038/d41586-026-00888-zA brain implant can help people with severe paralysis to move their hands. Plus, a US court has blocked RFK Jrs attempt to rewrite the countrys vaccine recommendations and a call from the chief exec of Microsoft AI to stop programming chatbots to hijack human empathy.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 21 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.ESPN.COMNFL to consider 5-year window for pick tradesThe Browns are proposing a rule change that would allow NFL teams to trade draft picks five years into the future instead of three.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 18 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.ESPN.COMR.I. team wins state title after tragic rink shootingThe R.I. high school hockey team that was on the ice during a mass shooting in the stands last month capped its season with a state title Wednesday, with Colin Dorgan -- who lost 3 family members in the tragedy -- scoring the equalizer late in regulation.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 18 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.ESPN.COMMessi scores, joins Ronaldo as 2nd player to 900Lionel Messi became just the second men's player in history to score 900 goals in official matches after scoring in Inter Miami's Concacaf Champions Cup clash with Nashville SC on Wednesday.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 19 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
Trumps Planning for Americas 250th Emphasizes Religions Role in the Nations FoundingA closed-door White House event included news about the National Garden of American Heroes and an emphasis on the role of religion in the founding.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMNASAs Hubble Telescope Spots Comet K1 Exploding Into FragmentsIn a stroke of luck, astronomers saw the comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) break into four or five fragments in November after it passed close to the sun.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 19 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
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WWW.ESPN.COMRoared on by Anfield, Liverpool finally found the hunger they've been missingWednesday's 4-0 win over Galatasaray felt like the night that Anfield found its voice and, in doing so, helped Liverpool find themselves.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 19 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMFamily of Minneapolis Boy Detained by ICE Faces Fast-Track DeportationThe family of 5-year-old Liam Conejos Ramos, who became a symbol of Trumps immigration crackdown, is appealing their accelerated removal.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMBondi Doesnt Commit to Deposition With House Panel Over Epstein FilesUnder the rules of the oversight committee, Attorney General Pam Bondi received a subpoena requiring her to appear. The panels Republican chairman said he sent the summons reluctantly.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.ESPN.COMUCL talking points: Are Arsenal favorites? Is anyone game enough to write-off Madrid?And then there were eight! With the UCL round of 16 done and dusted, ESPN's Mark Ogden, Tom Hamilton, Gab Marcotti and Alex Kirkland break down the action and what it means.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 18 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
FANTASY.ESPN.COMMake your picks nowLike favorites? Pick one as your champ0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 19 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
FANTASY.ESPN.COMMake your picks nowLike favorites? Pick one as your champ0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 18 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.ESPN.COMPrairie View A&M's run continues in First Four winOne year after winning only five games, Prairie View A&M continued its dramatic turnaround by earning its first NCAA tournament victory, a 67-55 triumph over Lehigh on Wednesday night in the First Four.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMIn Swaths of Germany, the Far-Right AfD Is Part of the FabricThe Alternative for Germany party, or AfD, is shunned in federal politics but is a regional force. This fall, it could win broader power for the first time.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 19 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMOzempic Is About to Go Generic in India, China and CanadaIn India, China and several other nations, Novo Nordisk is on the verge of losing patent protection for its blockbuster weight loss drug, opening the door for cheaper competing versions.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMJoseph Duggar of 19 Kids and Counting Faces Child Sex Abuse ChargesMr. Duggar, a former star of the TLC reality show, was arrested in Arkansas and was awaiting extradition to Florida, where the authorities said he molested a 9-year-old girl in 2020.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.ESPN.COMKerr to the point: Dubs 'going to be in the play-in'After a sixth loss in seven games, Warriors coach Steve Kerr laid bare the cold reality his team has been facing as it hobbles toward the regular season's conclusion: "We're going to be in the play-in. We know that."0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 19 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.ESPN.COMSources: WNBA cap set to top $10M by end of CBAThe projected salary cap under the pending WNBA collective bargaining agreement is set to exceed $10 million by the end of the agreement, sources told ESPN on Wednesday.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 19 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.ESPN.COMEnfield denies misleading NCAA on Edwards' injurySMU coach Andy Enfield said standout guard B.J. Edwards missed Wednesday's loss to Miami (Ohio) in the First Four because he didn't feel "game-ready" after the team had announced last Friday that he would be available for the tournament.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.ESPN.COMMiami (Ohio) gets first tourney win since 1999Miami (Ohio) beat SMU on Wednesday night in the First Four for its first NCAA tournament victory in 27 years.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 19 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMThe Iran Wars Economic Threat to Europe and AsiaInflation and its consequences for growth is a growing concern for countries where memories of the 2022 energy crisis are fresh.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMIranian Missile Attack Leaves 3 Palestinians Dead in West BankSeveral others were injured in the strike, which hit a caravan being used as a hair salon in the town of Beit Awwa, according to Palestinian officials.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
APNEWS.COMState Department cut jobs with deep expertise in Middle East as Iran crisis escalatesSecretary of State Marco Rubio speaks during a U.S. Hostage and Wrongful Detainee Flag Raising ceremony at the State Department, Monday, March 9, 2026 in Washington. (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf)2026-03-19T04:01:24Z WASHINGTON (AP) In the escalating war in Iran, the State Departments Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs would ordinarily be at the center of the geopolitical fray.Typically led by a veteran diplomat, the bureaus role would be to coordinate U.S. foreign policy across an 18-country region, much of which has become a chaotic battlefield scarred by drone and missile strikes as the U.S. and Israel remain locked in conflict with Iran. The Trump administration for a time put Mora Namdar, a lawyer of Iranian descent with limited management experience, in charge before later moving her to a different post. One of her credentials was her contribution to Project 2025, a conservative think tanks blueprint for the second Trump administration. Namdars last Senate-confirmed predecessor was a longtime Middle East expert who had been with the department since 1984 and had served as the U.S. ambassador to the United Arab Emirates.Now that bureau is also working with far fewer resources. The administrations most recent budget proposed a 40% cut to the bureau, though Congress eventually enacted less dramatic cuts. The administration also eliminated the dedicated Iran office, merging it with the Iraq office. Staff reductions and management choices hamper emergency responseThese kinds of personnel and management choices coupled with President Donald Trumps moves to shrink government and confine decision-making to a tight circle are limiting the ability of the United States to handle a global emergency, according to interviews with more than a dozen current and former U.S. officials, many of whom recently left government.In divisions of the State Department that typically would handle the Iran response, numerous veteran diplomats with decades of collective experience were fired, retired or were reassigned replaced by more junior officials or political appointees. The administration cut more than 80 staffers in Near Eastern Affairs, according to numbers compiled by a State Department employee who was terminated last year based on surveys of colleagues. (The department does not release official figures on Foreign Service officer staffing levels but did not dispute the number.) The Trump administration has left the assistant secretary position in charge of Near Eastern Affairs vacant, along with key ambassadorships in the Middle East. Four of the five supervisors in the bureau have temporary titles. The current and former officials, some of whom asked for anonymity to discuss sensitive internal matters during an active conflict, paint a portrait of an understaffed government workforce struggling to execute the presidents agenda. Those who remain tell colleagues that their analysis, recommendations and advice go unheeded. The State Department vigorously disputed those assessments.As far as we can tell, APs entire report on the evacuations does not include any conversations with people actually involved. Instead, it relies on outside or former official sources that have no idea what they are talking about. We walked AP through specific inaccuracy after specific inaccuracy indeed how the whole premise was wrong, State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott said. More than 3,800 State Dept. employees departed since Trump took officeThe State Department saw a departure of more than 3,800 employees since Trump took office through a combination of reductions in force, staffers taking the Fork in the Road deferred resignation plan and ordinary retirements. According to estimates by the American Foreign Service Association, the labor union that represents foreign service officers, senior foreign service ranks were disproportionately represented in the layoffs compared to their share of the overall workforce.Hes making choices without the larger expertise of the United States government that would flag issues of consequence, said Max Stier, CEO of the nonpartisan Partnership for Public Service, a nonprofit group that studies federal workforce issues. Sometimes government is slow-moving because there are a lot of different factors that need to be balanced against each other. Have a news tip?Contact APs global investigative team at [emailprotected]. For secure and confidential communications, use the free Signal app +1 (202) 281-8604. For instance, the administration appears to have been caught off guard by what would happen once the U.S. struck Iran something Trump himself acknowledged this week when he expressed surprise that Tehran retaliated with strikes on American allies in the region. Nobody expected that. We were shocked. They fought back, Trump told reporters this week. Pigott said staffing reductions are not having any negative impact on our ability to respond to this operation, our ability to plan, and our ability to execute in service to Americans. He added that the department rejects the premise that key decisions were made without meaningful input from experienced professionals.But Iranian retaliation on U.S. allies was predictable, according to former officials, as well as previous wargames and conflict models run by both the U.S. military and private organizations. The National Security Council, which Trump has pared, typically would have presented the president with analysis from experts within the bureaucracy. Instead, decisions are made by a small group of officials close to the president without the planning or coordination of the larger machinery of government, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who also serves as the presidents national security adviser.In the Trump Administration, decisions are made by President Trump and senior administration officials and not by no-name bureaucrat leakers who whine to the press about not being consulted about highly classified operations, White House spokesperson Dylan Johnson said.Advice from career officials often went unheededIn the time that I was there, there was no policy process to speak of, said Chris Backemeyer, who served in Near Eastern Affairs as a deputy assistant secretary of state before resigning last year. Backemeyer was a major proponent of the Iran deal that Trump abandoned. He recently left government to run for Congress as a Democrat in Nebraska. They did not want to hear any advice from career people, said Backemeyer. Namdar was later moved to be the head of consular affairs, the part of the department responsible for providing assistance to American citizens overseas and issuing visas to foreign visitors. When the U.S. made the decision to strike Iran, Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee offered embassy staff in Jerusalem the opportunity to evacuate a sign that he knew strikes were coming. But some other embassies in the region did not make similar arrangements leaving nonessential personnel and their families stranded in a war zone.The department said it has been issuing travel warnings since January and was fully staffed to handle the crisis the moment the strikes were launched. Evacuation planning was chaoticStill, little planning appears to have gone into how to evacuate the Americans who were living, working, visiting or studying in many of the countries that became engulfed in the conflict in part because the White House seems to have underestimated the possibility of the strikes expanding into a prolonged multi-country war, as evidenced by Trumps own remarks.After Iranian attacks on allies like Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, the State Department began calling for Americans to leave the region. But numerous former Consular Affairs staffers say such planning should have begun long before U.S. strikes started. In a statement posted to social media, Namdar only told Americans to evacuate several days into the conflict, when airspace was largely closed and many commercial flights were unavailable. The messaging that went out to American citizens after the U.S. struck Iran was woefully late and, initially, confusing, said Yael Lempert, who served as U.S. ambassador to Jordan until 2025. Lempert is one of five former ambassadors expected to speak about the departments failures at an event Thursday at the American Academy of Diplomacy in Washington.Other poorly executed evacuations, such the Biden administrations withdrawal from Afghanistan, have drawn criticism. But this time theyre compounded by the loss of experienced people, officials say. Consular Affairs has lost more than 150 jobs in the Trump administration due to a combination of reductions in force, dismissals of probationary employees and retirements, according to a U.S. official who asked for anonymity though other parts of the department were hit much harder.The department notes that it has offered assistance to nearly 50,000 Americans impacted by the conflict, with more than 60 flights evacuating citizens from the region. In total, the department says more than 70,000 Americans have been able to return home since the outbreak of hostilities on Feb. 28. Democrat says personnel reduction imperiled safetyThe loss of experienced personnel through these RIFs has clearly undermined the Bureau of Consular Affairs ability to fulfill its most important mission, to protect Americans abroad, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a statement. Language skills at the department are also atrophying. Thirteen Arabic speakers and four Farsi speakers, all trained at taxpayer expense, were among employees let go, according to a draft letter being circulated by former foreign service officers. It can cost $200,000 to train a foreign service officer in a language. The letter estimates that the total number of people fired by the State Department in the name of efficiency received more than $35 million in taxpayer-funded language training and more than $100 million in total training and other career development.The State Department has set up two temporary task forces to deal with the crisis in the Middle East. One aims to bolster the capacities of Near East Affairs and another is aimed at helping Consular Affairs evacuate Americans. A group of more than 250 Foreign Service officers were part of the administrations reduction-in-force last year but still remain on the State Departments payroll. Many have volunteered to return to the department to work on either a task force or do any other job that needs to be done with the outbreak of a global crisis.I havent been given any separation paperwork. I still have an active clearance. I could go back to the department tomorrow, either to backfill or staff a task force, said one foreign service officer who asked for anonymity because they are still technically on the departments payroll and are not authorized to speak to the press. I will do the scutwork jobs.The department hasnt responded to their offer but said in a statement that the task force is fully staffed. BYRON TAU Tau is an investigative reporter in the Washington, D.C. bureau of the Associated Press. He focuses on reporting stories about national security, law enforcement, technology and government accountability. He can be reached on Signal at byrontau.01 twitter mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 18 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMTehran intensifies attacks on Gulf energy facilities after Israel hits Iranian gas fieldIsraeli authorities hang Israeli and U.S. flags at the site struck by an Iranian missile that killed two people, in Ramat Gan, Israel, Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)2026-03-19T05:26:08Z DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) Iran intensified its attacks on its Gulf Arab neighbors energy infrastructure Thursday, setting Qatari liquified natural gas facilities ablaze as it hit back following an Israeli attack on its main natural gas field, a major escalation in the Mideast war that has sent global fuel prices soaring. A ship burned off the coast of the United Arab Emirates and another was damaged off of Qatar, underscoring the ever-present danger facing vessels due to Irans stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz.Qatar, a key source of natural gas for world markets, said firefighters had put out a blaze at a major LNG facility after it had been hit by Iranian missile attacks. Production had already been halted there after earlier attacks but it said the latest wave of missiles caused sizeable fires and extensive further damage. Damage to the facility could delay Qatar in getting its supplies to the market even after the Iran war ends.Authorities in Abu Dhabi said the country had been forced to shut down operations at its Habshan gas facility and Bab field, calling Iranian overnight attacks on the sites a dangerous escalation of the war. Gulf states condemn Iranian attacks on energy infrastructureMissile alert sirens sounded in multiple other areas around the Gulf, and Israel warned of incoming Iranian fire. Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates all denounced the Iranian attacks, with Saudi Arabias top diplomat saying assaults on the kingdom meant what little trust there was before has completely been shattered.In morning trading, Brent crude oil, the international standard, was above $110 a barrel, up more than 50% since Israel and the United States started the war Feb. 28 with strikes on Iran. Iran strikes back after Israel hits critical gas fieldThe wave of Iranian attacks came after Israel hit South Pars, the worlds largest gas field located offshore in the Persian Gulf and owned jointly by Iran and Qatar. With some 80% of all power generated in Iran coming from natural gas, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency, the attack directly threatens the countrys electricity supplies. Natural gas is also used to supply household heating and cooking across the Islamic Republic.Hitting the gas field is a clear expansion of the conflict, the New York-based Soufan Center said in a research note. Israels target selection in this war has heavily focused on the institutions, leaders and infrastructure ... the think tank said. It now seeks to inflict additional pressure on the regime by making the living conditions for civilians intolerable. Iran condemned the strike on South Pars, with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian warning of uncontrollable consequences that could engulf the entire world. In Washington, President Donald Trump said that Israel would not attack South Pars again, but warned on social media that if Iran continued striking Qatars energy infrastructure, the U.S. would retaliate and massively blow up the entirety of the field.I do not want to authorize this level of violence and destruction because of the long term implications that it will have on the future of Iran, Trump said on social media. Energy infrastructure targeted around Gulf regionQatar Energy said on X that it was a missile hit on its massive Ras Laffan liquefied natural gas facility that caused the blaze early Thursday.A ship was also hit off the countrys coast, according to the British militarys United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations center. It was not clear whether it was deliberately targeted of was struck by falling debris as Qatar fired off missile interceptors at incoming Iranian barrages. Saudi Arabia also reported downing Iranian drones targeting its natural gas facilities overnight, and authorities in Abu Dhabi said it had been forced to shut down its Habshan gas facility and Bab field after interceptions over the sites.Another ship was set ablaze early Thursday off the coast of the United Arab Emirates. It was also unclear whether it was targeted or hit with debris, the UKMTO said.It said the vessel was just off the coast of Khor Fakkan in the UAE, near the mouth of the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the worlds oil is normally shipped. More than 20 vessels have been attacked during the Iran war so far as Tehran has kept a tight grip on shipping traffic through the waterway, which leads from the Persian Gulf to the open ocean. Iran insists the waterway is open, just not to the U.S. or its allies, and while some vessels have sailed through, it has only been a trickle.Iran executes 3 men detained during January protestsIrans judiciary announced Thursday the execution of three men detained in Januarys nationwide protests, the first such sentences known to have been carried out.Irans Mizan news agency reported the executions. Iran typically carries out the death penalty with hangings.Mizan identified those executed as Mehdi Ghasemi, Saleh Mohammadi and Saeed Davvodi. It alleged the three men had stabbed two police officers to death in Qom, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) south of the capital, Tehran, during the protests. Irans judiciary has been threatening to carry out executions of those arrested in the protests.Iran put down the demonstrations with intense violence that killed thousands of people and saw tens of thousands others detained.Activists have warned Iran could carry out a wave of mass executions of those detained in the protests.Iran long has been accused by rights campaigners of extracting coerced confessions from detainees and not allowing them to fully defend themselves in court.Death toll climbs in third week of warMore than 1,300 people in Iran have been killed during the war. Israeli strikes have displaced more than 1 million Lebanese roughly 20% of the population according to the Lebanese government, which says 968 people have been killed.In Israel, 14 people have been killed by Iranian missile fire. At least 13 U.S. military members have been killed.___Metz reported from Ramallah, West Bank, and Rising from Bangkok. Associated Press writers Julie Watson in San Diego and Sally Abou AlJoud in Beirut contributed to this report. JON GAMBRELL Gambrell is the news director for the Gulf and Iran for The Associated Press. He has reported from each of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Iran and other locations across the world since joining the AP in 2006. twitter instagram mailto DAVID RISING Rising covers regional Asia-Pacific stories for The Associated Press. He has worked around the world, including covering the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Ukraine, and was based for nearly 20 years in Berlin before moving to Bangkok. twitter mailto SAM METZ Metz covers Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and points beyond for The Associated Press. mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 18 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMMany work to reconcile Csar Chavezs labor rights activist legacy with sexual abuse allegationsUnited Farm Workers leader Dolores Huerta, center, leads a rally in San Francisco's Mission District on Nov. 19, 1988, along with Howard Wallace, president of the San Francisco chapter of the UFW, left, and Maria Elena Chavez, 16, the daughter of Cesar Chavez, right, as part of a national boycott of what the UFW claims is the dangerous use of pesticides on table grapes. (AP Photo/Court Mast, File)2026-03-19T05:54:51Z PHOENIX (AP) Mary Rose Wilcox and her husband marched and fasted alongside Csar Chavez. They helped him open a radio station in Phoenix and plastered their Mexican restaurant with photos and a mural of the widely admired Latino icon.So when Wilcoxs daughter called this week to inform them of sexual abuse allegations that were leveled against Chavez, she said it felt like a punch to the gut. By Wednesday morning, the couple had taken down Chavezs photos from their restaurant walls and plan to cover the mural.We love Csar Chavez. But we cannot honor him and we cannot even love him anymore, said the former Phoenix City Council member.Many like Wilcox are working to reconcile the legacy of a man who fought tirelessly for the rights of farmworkers with stunning allegations that he sexually abused girls and the co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America union, Dolores Huerta. Latino leaders and community groups quickly called the alleged abuse by Chavez inexcusable, but they emphasized that the farmworker movement was never just about a single man. Chavez died in California in 1993 at age 66. There were calls to alter memorials honoring the man who in the 1960s helped secure better wages and working conditions for farmworkers and has been long revered by many Democratic leaders in the U.S. The California Museum said it will be removing Chavez from the states Hall of Fame - something its never done with anyone before. Some local and state leaders in both parties urged their communities not to observe Chavezs birthday on March 31 with the typical activities, and to rename buildings and city streets. Celebrations for Chavez in San Francisco, Texas and in his home state of Arizona already were canceled at the request of the Cesar Chavez Foundation.Huerta, who is a labor rights legend in her own right, said in a statement released Wednesday, that she stayed silent for 60 years out of concern that her words would hurt the farmworker movement. She said she did not know that Chavez had hurt other women. Huerta described two sexual encounters with Chavez, one where she was manipulated and pressured and another where she was forced against my will. She said both led to pregnancies, which she kept secret, and that she arranged for the children to be raised by other families.She joined Chavez in 1962 to co-found the National Farm Workers Association, which became the United Farm Workers of America. For many, they were akin to Martin Luther King. Jr. and Rosa Parks because of their work advocating for racial equality and civil rights.The New York Times first reported Wednesday that it found Chavez groomed and sexually abused young girls who worked in the movement. Huerta, too, revealed to the newspaper that she was a victim of the abuse in her 30s.Chavez is known nationally for his early organizing in the fields, a hunger strike, a grape boycott and eventual victory in getting growers to negotiate with farmworkers for better wages and working conditions. Streets, schools and parks across the Southwest bear Chavezs name. California became the first state to commemorate his birthday, and in 2014, then-President Barack Obama proclaimed March 31 as national Csar Chavez Day. President Joe Biden had a bronze bust of Chavez installed in the Oval Office when he moved into the White House. Biden and Obama have not yet commented on the allegations, while California Gov. Gavin Newsom said he was still processing the news. Chavez was full of contradictions even when he was the union leader, said Miriam Pawel, a veteran California journalist who wrote a biography of him. There was abusive behaviors within the union, but people didnt speak out because they believed the union was the best way to protect farmworkers, she said.For many, many years, for most of those people, even when they saw things that they found disturbing, they did not wanna talk about it, Pawel said.Born in Yuma, Arizona, Chavez grew up in a Mexican American family that traveled around California picking lettuce, grapes, cotton and other seasonal crops. Chavezs family said in a statement that they are devastated by news of the allegations.We wish peace and healing to the survivors and commend their courage to come forward. As a family steeped in the values of equity and justice, we honor the voices of those who feel unheard and who report sexual abuse, the family said.The Cesar Chavez Foundation pledged unequivocal support for the labor leaders victims Wednesday and said with the Chavez familys support -- the organization will figure out its identity going forward.The United Farm Workers union quickly distanced itself from annual celebrations of its founder, calling the allegations troubling.Wilcox said Chavez helped people understand that workers at all levels matter by organizing marches and helping enact laws and get contracts for workers. She said it was heartbreaking to have to take down the pictures that visitors to their restaurant loved to take photos in front of.Theres two things: Chavez the man and Chavez the man who we didnt know, she said. And the one we knew, we knew the good things he did and the things we saw put in place. ... And the one we did not know is like a monster.___Golden reported from Seattle. Figueroa reported from Austin, Texas. Associated Press writers Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, New Mexico; Trn Nguyn in Sacramento, California; and Dorany Pineda in Los Angeles contributed to this report. JACQUES BILLEAUD Billeaud is an Associated Press reporter who covers courts and law enforcement in Arizona. He previously covered immigration and the Arizona Legislature. FERNANDA FIGUEROA Figueroa reports on Latino/Hispanic affairs as a member of the APs Race & Ethnicity team. twitter mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMLeBron says no interest in Vegas expansion bidLeBron James, who has publicly entertained the possibility of being part of an ownership group for a potential NBA expansion franchise in Las Vegas, said he no longer intends to pursue the venture.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 18 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
Late Night Tells the Tale of Dueling SenatorsAlso very funny to describe a duel as being between two consenting adults. You know, because if only one person consents, thats murder, said Seth Meyers, host of Late Night.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMLeBron's 6 dunks key Lakers' 7th straight winLeBron James put on a show Wednesday night in Houston as the Lakers matched their winning streak to a season-best seven games.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 22 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
APNEWS.COMJoe Kents resignation over Iran war reignites antisemitism fears and debate over Israeli influenceJoseph Kent, director of the National Counterterrorism Center, speaks during the House Committee on Homeland Security on Capitol Hill in Washington, Dec. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)2026-03-19T05:58:40Z It was no surprise when Joe Kent showed up on Tucker Carlsons podcast a day after quitting his counterterrorism job in President Donald Trumps administration. Here was a top official who resigned to protest the war with Iran turning to right-wing medias leading critic of the conflict.The Israelis drove the decision to take this action, Kent said in Wednesdays interview.But before long, the conversation moved in a different direction as Kent nodded to conspiracy theories that pro-Israel forces were behind the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.Im saying there are unanswered questions, Kent said.The conversation encapsulated two schisms within the Republican Party and the right-wing media system, both of which have reached high into the national security establishment of the Trump administration.Theres a foreign policy debate over the wisdom of Trumps war with Iran and the future of United States longstanding alliance with Israel. But there also are fears that the focus on Israel is the leading edge of an antisemitic fringe that has gained ground by portraying Jews as shadowy manipulators, echoing some of historys most hateful tropes. Tucker Carlson is playing a central roleAt the center of both issues is Carlson, a former Fox News host who remains influential among conservatives. He was previously denounced for hosting Nick Fuentes, a white nationalist and antisemite, on his podcast last year. During the interview, Fuentes complained about organized Jewry in America. On Wednesday, Carlson was sharply critical about Israel, saying its lobbying in the United States pressured the president.Matt Brooks, president of the Republican Jewish Coalition, described Kents appearance on Carlsons podcast as part of an ongoing problem. He noted that his group opposed Kents nomination as director of the National Counterterrorism Center because of ties to right-wing extremism. Trump ignored those concerns even though, as he said after Kents resignation, I always thought he was weak on security and I didnt know him well. Kents resignation letter trafficked in antisemitic conspiracy theories while raising concerns about the war with Iran. He blamed high-ranking Israeli officials and influential members of the American media for encouraging conflict. Indeed, Israeli leaders including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu encouraged Trump to join forces in an attack on Iran. But Kent also went further, saying its the same tactic the Israelis used to draw us into the disastrous Iraq war. He also said his wife, a Navy cryptologist who was killed by a suicide bomber in Syria, died in a war manufactured by Israel. Sen. Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, described the letter as virulent antisemitism. Rep. Josh Gottheimer, a New Jersey Democrat, said scapegoating Israel isnt just a tired antisemitic trope its anti-American.Kent has previously rejected all forms of racism and bigotry. Trump has said nothing about Kents remarks on Israel. Hes previously disputed the idea that Israel pushed him toward war, saying I might might have forced their hand. Unified Republican support for Israel has fracturedQuestions about Israeli influence are not unique to right-wing circles. Progressives have also faced accusations of antisemitism for their response to the war in Gaza, which began with an attack by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023.But its been a widening fault line within the Republican Party, which has been a bedrock of support for Israel over the years. Conservatives are still reckoning with the fallout from Carlsons interview with Fuentes.For example, board members and other staff resigned from the Heritage Foundation after the think tanks president defended Carlson. Trump tried to sidestep the issue, declining to criticize Fuentes and praising Carlson for having said good things about me over the years. The president previously dined with Fuentes at Mar-a-Lago in between his two terms, and Carlson has continued to visit the White House. Mort Klein, president of the conservative Jewish Group Zionists for America, said Wednesday that he supports Trump but Id like him to do more about antisemitism. I want him to be stronger on those issues, Klein said.Carlson has said that he is not antisemitic. But he has said anti-Jewish hate is less pervasive in society than bias against white people, and that some Christian politicians who were fervent supporters of Israel, such as Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, were guilty of heresy. Israel divide simmers in right-wing mediaThe Iran war is poised to continue fracturing right-wing media. Ben Shapiro, co-founder of The Daily Wire, called Carlsons Fuentes interview an act of moral imbecility and accused the host of misleading his audience with falsehoods and conspiracy theories.Hes also feuded with Candace Owens, who has promoted antisemitic conspiracy theories. Dennis Prager, a conservative commentator, wrote in an open letter to Owens that I cannot think of anyone in public life engendering as much suspicion of Jews, Zionism and Israel as you. Megyn Kelly, like Carlson a former Fox News Channel anchor now helming her own independent media empire, said the war was sold to the American people by Israel firsters, like Mark Levin. Levin, a radio and Fox personality, has been among Trumps most fervent supporters of the war.Levin, for his part, called Kelly an emotionally unhinged, lewd and petulant wreck.It promises to continue.Levin posted on social media an invitation to Kent to appear on his show in the coming days.Sure, Kent replied. Lets go. THOMAS BEAUMONT Beaumont covers national politics for The Associated Press. He is based in Des Moines, Iowa. twitter mailto DAVID BAUDER Bauder is the APs national media writer, covering the intersection of news, politics and entertainment. He is based in New York. twitter mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 21 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMOil and natural gas prices soar as Iran attacks Gulf energy facilities. Brent crude nears $114Currency traders work near a screen showing the Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI), top center, and the foreign exchange rate between U.S. dollar and South Korean won, top center left, at the foreign exchange dealing room of the Hana Bank headquarters in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)2026-03-19T03:03:44Z BANGKOK (AP) Global oil and natural gas prices soared Thursday after Iran attacked a key natural gas facility in Qatar that can supply one-fifth of the worlds gas as well as two oil refineries in Kuwait.The attacks added to fears the energy crisis triggered by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz to tanker traffic may be longer and more extensive than feared, with lasting damage to oil and gas production.Brent crude, the international benchmark, rose to near $114 per barrel, up from under $73 per barrel on the eve of the war. The European TTF benchmark for natural gas prices traded 24% higher on Thursday.The Iranian attack hit the Ras Laffan terminal for shipping out liquefied natural gas in Qatar. Qatar normally supplies some 20% of the worlds consumption of LNG, which can be carried by ship. The facility shut down after a drone attack. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz to most tanker traffic has left the gas with nowhere to go. World shares retreated after stocks on Wall Street slumped as oil prices resumed their climb. U.S. stocks also sagged due to a report that said inflation was primed to worsen even before the war with Iran sent oil and gas prices spiking. That, and comments from the head of the Federal Reserve, led investors to expect theres less chance of getting the lower interest rates that they crave. U.S. futures were little changed, while Treasury yields pushed higher, lending still more strength to the U.S. dollar, which has gained against other major currencies since the war began. Oil prices have soared because the war has disrupted the Persian Gulfs energy industry. Iran is intensifying its attacks on its Gulf Arab neighbors energy infrastructure as it hits back following an Israeli attack on its main natural gas field. If the disruptions keep oil and gas prices high for long, they could create a debilitating wave of inflation for the global economy. U.S. benchmark crude oil gained 1.1% to $96.45 a barrel early Thursday, while the Henry Hub future contract, the benchmark for U.S. natural gas, gained 3.3%. In Asian share trading, Tokyos Nikkei 225 fell 3.4% to 53,372.53 as the Bank of Japan opted to keep its benchmark interest rate on hold at 0.75%, citing the war with Iran as one factor.In its monetary policy statement the BOJ said that in the wake of increased tension in the Middle East, global financial and capital markets have been volatile and crude oil prices have risen significantly; future developments warrant attention. Higher oil prices are a heavy burden for Japan, which like South Korea and Taiwan depends on imports of most raw materials for industries that rely heavily on oil and its derivatives. The Kospi in Seoul lost 2.7% to 5,763.22.In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng slipped 2% to 25,507.89, while the Shanghai Composite index shed 1.6% to 3,996.44.Australias S&P/ASX 200 lost 1.7% to 8,497.80 and Taiwans Taiex fell 1.9%. In India, which has also suffered from shocks to supplies of oil and gas, the Sensex lost 2.3%.The combination of higher oil, rising U.S. yields, and a stronger dollar is acting as a macro wrecking ball across Asian assets and currencies, Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said in a commentary. On Wednesday, the S&P 500 fell 1.4% to 6,624.70, flipping to a loss for the week so far. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1.6% to 46,225.15, and the Nasdaq composite slid 1.5% to 22,152.42.The losses deepened after the Fed decided to keep its main interest rate steady, instead of resuming cuts meant to give the job market and economy a boost.We just dont know, Fed chair Jerome Powell said about what will happen with oil prices, along with how long President Donald Trumps tariffs will take to work their way fully through the system. A report released Wednesday morning showed inflation pressures were already building before the war began. It said inflation at the U.S. wholesale level unexpectedly accelerated last month to 3.4%. In other dealings early Thursday, The U.S. dollar fell to 159.71 Japanese yen from 159.88 yen. The euro rose to $1.1467 from $1.1453.___McHugh contributed from Frankfurt, Germany. ELAINE KURTENBACH Based in Bangkok, Kurtenbach is the APs business editor for Asia, helping to improve and expand our coverage of regional economies, climate change and the transition toward carbon-free energy. She has been covering economic, social, environmental and political trends in China, Japan and Southeast Asia throughout her career. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMCsar Chavez and Dolores Huerta led a movement that won better wages and conditions for farmworkersRefurbished statues of Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta is seen at the studio of Napa artist and sculptor Mario Chiodo, Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025. (Kent Porter/The Press Democrat)2026-03-19T03:31:20Z Dolores Huerta and the late Csar Chavez are both labor rights icons credited with leading a movement that pushed growers to negotiate for better wages and working conditions for farmworkers.Their legacies are getting new attention after allegations emerged that Chavez, who died in 1993, sexually abused Huerta and other women and girls. Several celebrations honoring Chavez planned around the country for later this month have been canceled.Chavez and Huerta co-founded the National Farm Workers Association in 1962, which became the United Farm Workers of America a few years later when it merged with the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee. The rise of the movement is one of the most important events in U.S. history and is the most important event in U.S. Latino history, said Paul Ortiz, a Cornell University labor history professor. United Farm Workers made the most important sustained changes in the working conditions of agricultural workers in the nations history, he said. Agricultural workers from Hawaii to Florida to New York to Southern California had tried to organize to improve their wages and working conditions, literally for centuries, going back to slavery times, Ortiz said. And almost every effort failed, some catastrophically. Chavez and Huerta are credited with efforts that prompted California to pass the first state law recognizing farmworkers right to collective bargaining. Both have streets and schools named after them. Several states have designated March 31, Chavezs birthday, as a day to commemorate him, and former President Barack Obama declared it a federal commemorative holiday in 2014.Heres a look at their lives and legacies: Csar ChavezChavez is known for his early organizing in the fields, a hunger strike, a grape boycott and eventual victory in getting growers to negotiate with farmworkers for better wages and working conditions.Born in Yuma, Arizona, Chavez grew up in a Mexican American family that traveled around California picking lettuce, grapes, cotton and other seasonal crops.Chavez protested poor pay and often-miserable working conditions. There were no toilets in the fields for workers and they had to weed fields with short-handled hoes that forced them to bend over for hours at a time. The farmworker movement lifted worker wages, banned short-handed hoes and established state-mandated clean drinking water and restrooms in the fields, according to a National Park Service document supporting the creation of a national monument in Chavezs honor. In 1966, he led a march that started with a few activists in Delano, California, and ended in Sacramento with 10,000 people, according to Obamas 2014 proclamation. Some 17 million people joined a boycott of grapes, which forced growers to accept some of the first farmworker contracts in history, the proclamation said.Chavez began the first credit union for farmworkers, health clinics, daycare centers and job-training programs, the Cesar Chavez Foundation said on its website. He was, for his own people, a Moses figure, then-President Bill Clinton said in 1994 when posthumously awarding Chavez the Presidential Medal of Freedom.Chavez died the year before in California at age 66. Dolores HuertaThe labor and civil rights leader secured higher wages, health benefits, pensions and pesticide protections for farmworkers during her decades of organizing and advocacy on their behalf. Now 95, Huerta helped organize the 1965 Delano strike of 5,000 grape workers and was the lead negotiator in the workers contract that followed, according to the National Womens History Museum.A single mother, Huerta gave up a stable teaching career to organize. She was jailed over 20 times for protests and seriously injured in 1988 while demonstrating. She later championed womens rights, encouraged Latinas to run for office and founded the Dolores Huerta Foundation to combat discrimination, poverty and inequality.She coined the iconic slogan S, se puede meaning Yes, we can -- in 1972 while rallying Arizona farmworkers against a law banning boycotts and strikes. She defied claims it was impossible to organize there.Huerta received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2012 and in 1993 became the first Latina inducted into the National Womens Hall of Fame. ___Associated Press writers Susan Montoya Bryan and Fernanda Figueroa contributed to this report. AUDREY McAVOY McAvoy is a Honolulu-based reporter who covers news in Hawaii and beyond. twitter mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 21 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMJapans Prime Minister Takaichi meets with Trump as he seeks help securing the Strait of HormuzJapanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, center, arrives at Joint Base Andrews, Md. Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Yuki Sato/Kyodo News via AP)2026-03-19T04:07:49Z WASHINGTON (AP) The meeting that Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi will have at the White House on Thursday originally seemed like a prime opportunity to have President Donald Trumps ear before he embarked on a trip to China.But now, the war in Iran and Trumps unsuccessful call for Japan and other nations to help protect the Strait of Hormuz means the China trip has been delayed and Takaichi may be likely to get an earful.Trump has repeatedly complained on camera and online that U.S. allies, including Japan, have rejected his request to help safeguard the critical waterway for oil and gas transport.In fact, speaking as President of the United States of America, by far the Most Powerful Country Anywhere in the World, WE DO NOT NEED THE HELP OF ANYONE! Trump exclaimed on Truth Social after his initial call for help was rebuffed. The prime minister acknowledged before she left Japan that she expects her meeting with Trump will be very difficult. She and her ministers have denied that Washington officially requested Japanese warships for the U.S.-Israeli operation.Japan, a key U.S. ally in Asia, is one of the countries that Trump namechecked on Tuesday as he railed against the lack of help with the Strait of Hormuz before declaring the help wasnt needed. Trump is expected to put enormous pressure on Takaichi, said Kurt Campbell, the former U.S. deputy secretary of state in the Biden administration who is now chair of The Asia Group. Campbell said hes never seen a meeting between U.S. and Japanese leaders carrying such high stakes. In order to press for Japans interests, he said, Takaichi will want to find a way to suggest that Japan is a part of the U.S. plan in the Middle East.Shes going to want to come out of that as a partner in this case and realize that if she can do that, that she can translate that potentially into the president listening more to Japanese concerns about Taiwan or other issues, Campbell said. The constraints on Japans involvement in Iran include a provision in its post-World War II constitution that bans the use of force except to defend its territory. The countrys military is called the Self-Defense Force.Christopher Johnstone, a partner and chair of the defense and national security practice at The Asia Group, said Japan could help with mine-sweeping, and has had a small naval presence in the region as part of an anti-piracy mission for at least a decade. But to join the U.S. mission would require Takaichi to clear an exceptionally high bar politically to invoke collective self-defense that has never been done before.Takaichi wanted to focus on trade and security in the Indo-Pacific regionTakaichi, who had her first meeting with Trump in October in Tokyo, is Japans first female prime minister and a protg of former leader Shinzo Abe, who developed a close relationship with Trump.She is also a hardline conservative and longtime supporter of Taiwan whose comments about Japans willingness to provide military support to the island have heightened tensions with China.Ahead of her meeting with Trump, Takaichi had sought to focus on trade, strengthening the U.S.-Japan relationship and security concerns. Japanese officials said the two sides would work to deepen cooperation in regional security, critical minerals, energy and dealing with China. China views self-governed Taiwan, which the U.S. relies on for its production of computer chips, as its sovereign territory and has said it would take it by force if needed.But beyond questions about helping with the Strait of Hormuz, the global implications of the Iran war have also put the Japanese leader in a tougher spot with Trump as she seeks to ensure U.S. commitment to the Indo-Pacific region.Japan considers China a growing security threat and has pushed a military buildup on southwestern islands near the East China Sea. But the U.S. has shifted some troops stationed in Japan to the Middle East, removing a check against Chinas power.Takaichi is expected to raise concerns about troop shifts with Trump because they are coming at the same time China is launching a large number of exercises around Taiwan. This raises the prospect that once again the United States will be distracted and bogged down in the Middle East at a time when the deterrence problem in East Asia has never been greater, Johnstone said.___Associated Press writer Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contributed to this report. MICHELLE L. PRICE Price covers the White House. She previously covered the 2024 presidential campaign and politics, government and other news in New York, Nevada, Utah and Arizona. She is based in Washington. twitter mailto DIDI TANG Tang joined the AP Washington bureau in 2023 after spending 11 years in Beijing as a China correspondent. She covers anything related to the Indo-Pacific region with a focus on U.S.-China competitions mailto0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMEuropean Union summit will focus on Iran war and a loan to Ukraine blocked by HungaryEuropean Commission President Ursula von der Leyen delivers a statement during a media conference at EU headquarters in Brussels, Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)2026-03-19T05:32:24Z BRUSSELS (AP) European Union leaders are holding a summit in Brussels on Thursday for talks on the Iran war, energy prices, migration and an enormous loan for war-ravaged Ukraine being held up by Hungary.Many of those leaders have deflected entreaties by U.S. President Donald Trump to send military assets to secure the Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway for the global flow of oil, gas and fertilizer. Rising energy prices because of the war and fears in Europe of a new refugee crisis have pushed leaders to make the Middle East one of the top priorities at the summit.The European Commission, the EUs executive branch, has floated the idea of a toolbox of measures to lower energy prices for leaders to discuss because no single policy will work across the myriad markets in the 27-nation bloc to blunt economic shocks from the war, according to a senior European diplomat who wasnt authorized to be publicly named so spoke on condition of anonymity. The summit will also focus on a long-brewing standoff between Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbn and most other EU nations.The last EU summit was held in December at a Belgian castle, where the leaders including Orbn agreed to a 90 billion-euro ($104 billion) loan for Ukraine for help overcoming a budget shortfall in the country as it grapples with a grinding war with Russia. But a month later, Orbn backtracked after the Druzhba oil pipeline was disabled in January after what Ukrainian officials said was a Russian drone attack. The pro-Russia leader, who has held office in Hungary since 2010, is running an aggressive media campaign villainizing both Brussels and Kyiv as he seeks reelection next month. If there is no oil, there is no money, Orbn said in a social media post on Tuesday.To get Ukraine the much-needed loan, EU leaders and diplomats will lobby Orbn and Slovakias prime minister, Robert Fico, whose government has also taken pro-Russia stances. On Tuesday, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen offered for the EU to pay to repair the Druzhba pipeline and the development of alternative fuel lines for Hungary and Slovakia.Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that any obstruction to the loan is absolutely unfair and that there is no alternative for the embattled nation than those funds as it faces a severe budget crisis because of the war, which began on Feb. 24, 2022.There may be alternatives in terms of financing mechanisms, but there is simply no alternative to strengthening our army, Zelenksyy said on Wednesday. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz told lawmakers in Berlin on Wednesday that the EU must swiftly reach an agreement on the 20th package of sanctions against Russia and the loan.He said that he would advocate for that emphatically in Brussels and that we must not take into consideration a single country in the European Union that is currently setting up this blockade in Europe now for domestic political reasons and because of an election campaign that is being conducted there.Merz said, in urging for more sanctions, that the needs of the moment call for us to increase the pressure on Moscow together the U.S. and the European partners together.___Karel Janicek in Prague, Geir Moulson in Berlin, and Illia Novikov in Kyiv, Ukraine, contributed to this report. SAM McNEIL McNeil covers Europe and beyond with a focus on conflict and the environment. twitter instagram facebook mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 21 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMWhite Identity Is Galvanizing the RightHe wrote a book on anti-white bias. The White House noticed.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 18 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMThe Surge of Anti-Muslim Hate Demands RepudiationThe attacks are shameful and full of lies.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 19 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
APNEWS.COMEU scrambles to contain energy costs from war in Middle EastNetherland's Prime Minister Rob Jetten arrives for the EU summit at the European Council building in Brussels, Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)2026-03-19T08:33:18Z BRUSSELS (AP) Leaders from across the European Union are meeting Thursday to grapple with rising oil and gas prices caused by the war raging across key energy producers and shipping lanes in the Middle East.Many of those leaders have deflected entreaties by U.S. President Donald Trump to send military assets to secure the Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway for the global flow of oil, gas and fertilizer. Rising energy prices because of the war and fears in Europe of a new refugee crisis have pushed leaders to make the Middle East a priority at the summit.We are very worried about the energy crisis, said Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever ahead of the European Council summit of 27 leaders of European Union nations. He said that energy prices were too high before the war, but that the conflict created another spike.If that becomes structural, were in deep trouble, he said. At a European level, some measures can be taken to address the problem of the high energy prices. The European Commission has told leaders it has a mix of financial instruments that member nations could deploy to lower energy prices, which will be up for discussion. No single policy will likely work to blunt the economic shocks from the war across the blocs myriad markets from Romania to Ireland. European leaders have struggled to take a firm stance on the fighting in Iran and Lebanon. While they have been critical of the Iranian government, they have not provided military support. This is a war that was started by the United States and Israel against Iran on reasons that I can understand because the Iranian regime is brutal not only for its own people, but also for the broader region and a security threat for Europe, said Dutch Prime Minister Rob Jetten.But its not a war that we are part of, he said, calling for more sanctions on Iran and support for opposition groups. SAM McNEIL McNeil covers Europe and beyond with a focus on conflict and the environment. twitter instagram facebook mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMCalifornia community ties all-time March temperature record in the USA baseball fan tries to shield from the sun during the fourth inning of a spring training baseball game between the Chicago White Sox and the Athletics, Tuesday, March 17, 2026, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)2026-03-19T03:17:48Z NORTH SHORE, Calif. (AP) A tiny desert community in Southern California reached 108 degrees on Wednesday, tying the highest March temperature ever recorded in the U.S.It came amid a record-breaking winter heat wave in the Southwest that will stretch into the weekend and could produce even higher temperatures.The record first reached by Rio Grande City, Texas in 1954 and now shared by North Shore, California could be broken in a number of cities and towns by weeks end. The aptly named Thermal, California, was forecast to hit 110 degrees on Friday.Triple-digit temperatures also came earlier than ever before in Phoenix when the Arizona capital hit 101 degrees Wednesday, according to the National Weather Service. The previous record was set almost 40 years ago, on March 26, 1988, the only other time Phoenix temperatures have climbed into the hundreds during the month of March, according to the NWS. Bryan Lewis, a meteorologist with the NWS, said this has been one of the most significant March heatwaves in recorded history.Weve broken so many records yesterday and even today weve broken quite a few so far, he said. Several cities on Wednesday experienced their hottest March day in almost 40 years, according to the NWS.Las Vegas hit 99 degrees, smashing its hottest March day on record, which was 93 degrees in 2022.Downtown Los Angeles reached 94 degrees, beating its previous daily high of 87 degrees in 1997. And the desert destination of Palm Springs, California, was 104 degrees, tying its hottest March day on record from 1966.It will continue to be 20 to 30 degrees above normal March temperatures for the rest of the week in the Southwest before dropping slightly over the weekend. Many other cities in the region are expected to see their earliest 100-plus degree day on record, according to the NWS.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMIn Lebanon, war and displacement mar run-up to Eid al-Fitr holiday for manyVolunteers carrying meals to be distributed for displaced people who fled Israeli strikes from south Lebanon at a school turned into a shelter, in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)2026-03-19T08:15:22Z BEIRUT (AP) Normally, Lilian Jamaan would have been shopping for clothes for her daughter and buying meat and sweets in preparation for the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Fitr that marks the end of Ramadan.But now, theres no joy for Eid or for Ramadan or for anything, Jamaan said by phone from a school-turned-shelter in the Lebanese city of Sidon, where shes been displaced with her family.Everything is difficult, she said.As the Islamic holy month of Ramadan draws to an end and Muslims worldwide prepare for the typically joyous holiday of Eid al-Fitr, Lebanon has crossed a grim milestone. Israels strikes have displaced more than 1 million people in the country, according to the Lebanese government. Lebanons health ministry said 968 people were killed by the Israeli strikes in the country since the renewal of hostilities between Israel and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah. The Iran-backed Hezbollah entered the wider Iran war by firing rockets at Israel. That led to the heavy Israeli bombardment of southern Lebanon and Beiruts southern suburbs, driving many from their homes. Children wishing to spend Eid at home A lot of the kids that I at least spoke to, their biggest wish was to just spend Eid at home, said Basma Alloush, a spokesperson for the International Rescue Committee. Eid is a time where all families come together, people celebrate with their relatives, and it usually brings a lot of peace and joy to families. ... It could be that many of them just spend Eid in shelters, in displacement.The suffering has played out during Ramadan with scenes of people forced to flee their homes, reduced to sleeping in tents on the streets or in their cars. Some secured coveted spots in schools and other locations turned into shelters or stayed with relatives; many others scrambled to find makeshift arrangements. Only about 130,000 are in shelters. For Jamaan, the harsh conditions in displacement meant she could no longer observe many aspects of Ramadan a time for fasting, increased worship and usually festive communal gatherings with loved ones. At home, she said she would fast, pray and read the Quran, the Muslim holy book. Now, she said, shes stopped her fast and would make up for missed days when she returns home. Some people fast and some are unable to fast; theres psychological stress and were not sleeping well. ... Food is the last thing on my mind, but the circumstances are difficult.She said she and her daughter sleep with others in the school while her husband sleeps in the car. Theres no stability. She misses her loved ones and her Ramadan routine. We would break our fast, pray, make and drink coffee and I would go to the neighbors or they would come over after iftar, the fast-breaking meal, she recalled.Asmahan Taleb, whos also displaced in Sidon, said the run-up to Eid has been marred by hardship.How can we celebrate Eid when were displaced from our homes and our land? Where is the Eid? Where is the happiness? she said. It will be Eid when we can return to our homes. Humanitarian fallout and enduring one crisis after anotherLike many others, this is not Jamaans first displacement. Her daughter, she said, was born during an earlier wave of displacement from a round of fighting that was halted with a tenuous ceasefire in November 2024. Israel continued to launch near-daily strikes in Lebanon after the ceasefire that it said aimed to stop Hezbollah from rebuilding.Lebanon for us is really now the epicenter of the more immediate humanitarian fallout of this broader regional crisis, said Carl Skau, deputy executive director and chief operating officer of the U.N. World Food Program. People here have endured crisis after crisis. Theyve been displaced before. But that doesnt make it any easier.He said people he met were exhausted and hadnt yet recovered from the last time.There was this real sense of uncertainty this time. How is this gonna end? When is it gonna end?And thats not all thats different now. My concern is that the funding is not coming forward like it did last time, he told The Associated Press. We know there is less money available. We know there is also competing priorities. ... We will need to make an effort that really donors step up.As part of its response, WFP has provided more than half million hot meals to displaced people in shelters across Lebanon since March 2. Response efforts and varied needsOnline, many volunteers, organizations and businesses have been sharing various initiatives to make, package and distribute hot meals for iftar and donate essentials from blankets and clothes to formula milk and medications.The needs are varied and ample.There is a dire need for shelter, Alloush said. There was a massive thunderstorm. Were just thinking about the people that were sleeping outside, sleeping in tents that are not waterproof, sleeping on the mud.She said IRC has been distributing mattresses, pillows and blankets as well as coloring books. People dont have enough clothes. Children fled with no toys or no activities to kind of get their minds off of the war.Eman Abo Khadra, a hair salon owner in Sidon, said she tried to bring a bit of Eid cheer to some displaced children the way she knows best: giving them haircuts as a gift.Its a morale thing. What does a child know about war or no war. Its just about planting some joy in their hearts.But despite her gesture, she felt the toll the tensions are taking on the young. I was telling them, Come on, clap; be happy; laugh, but ... tensions are high, she said. People are tired.Sheltering in Sidon, Alia Ismail said its hard to properly observe Ramadan or tap into the Eid joy.We no longer can fast or buy anything for Ramadan, she said. For Eid, her children tell her We want clothes; we want to go out; we want sweets, she said. I tell them, I cant get you that. Theres no money.In normal times, she said, she would have been cleaning her home, buying clothes, meat and sweets for Eid. Can you imagine that we are staying in a school corridor? she said by phone, adding she puts clothes under her head when she sleeps as she has no pillows.Striving to recapture a taste of Ramadan and EidIn a Beirut school sheltering hundreds of people, some tried to recapture a taste of Ramadans traditions and the lives they left behind. Hallways between classrooms were adorned with decorations. One family placed a small gas burner and some meal packages from charities on a few desks lined up together. At the school, Shaker Araqa lamented how his extended family has been dispersed. We used to gather. We were in one building. Now, everyone is at a different place.Nabila Hijazi said her children wonder about Eid, adding shell buy them clothes. They want to live their lives, she said. We tell them God Willing, Eid comes and we return to our homes.She said shes been able to observe Ramadan normally at the school and is conscious of how much better her situation is than many others.Back in Sidon, Jamaan said she prays for God to stop the war, for us to return to our homes and for there to be peace.___Fam reported from Cairo. Associated Press journalist Mohammed Zaatari in Sidon, Lebanon, contributed to this report___Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APs collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. MARIAM FAM Fam is a reporter with The Associated Press Global Religion team. She covers faith, and the many ways it intersects with culture and daily life, in the Middle East and beyond. mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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APNEWS.COMOvernight storm in Pakistans largest city, Karachi, kills at least 15 people and injures severalLocal residents navigate through the rubble of boundary wall collapsed due to heavy rains and strong winds in Karachi, Pakistan, Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Ali Raza)2026-03-19T05:54:48Z KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) Heavy rains and strong winds lashed Pakistans largest city overnight, killing at least 15 people and injuring several others as walls and roofs collapsed at multiple locations, emergency services and hospital officials said Thursday.The storm that began Wednesday continued into the night in Karachi, the capital of southern Sindh province. Authorities advised residents to avoid unnecessary travel.At least 15 bodies were brought to the citys main hospital. More than two dozen people were injured and treated at hospitals after weather-related incidents, police surgeon Summaiya Tariq and emergency officials said. The storm also uprooted roadside trees and disrupted traffic, according to rescue officials and police.The Pakistan Meteorological Department said winds of up to 90 kph (56 mph) lasted for hours. Karachi Mayor Murtaza Wahab urged residents to stay indoors and avoid unnecessary movement, warning that many trees had fallen and crews were working to clear roads. Forecasters said more rain and thunderstorms with strong winds and possible isolated hailstorms could continue to affect Karachi and other parts of Sindh province as a westerly weather system moves across the region.Rain and storms lashed many other areas across the country, emergency services reported.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 21 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
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WWW.ESPN.COMTransfer rumors, news: Real Madrid, PSG, Liverpool, Man United eye RayanEurope's biggest clubs are keeping an eye on Bournemouth winger Rayan, while Barcelona look for another route to sign Marcus Rashford. Transfer Talk has the latest.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 22 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGHow Robert F. Kennedy Jr.s Vaccine Agenda Risks a Resurgence of Deadly Childhood PlaguesDr. Adam Ratner hovered over a gravely ill infant in a New York City intensive care unit on a grim day in 2022. The 3-month-old girl spiked a fever two days earlier and had become lethargic. Soon she was having seizures and struggling to breathe.She didnt register Ratners towering frame or the bright hospital lights. Her eyes stared up and to the right, eerily frozen.He ran his hand over the soft spot on her head, which should have been flat. Instead, it bulged, a sign that too much fluid was building up inside her skull.The babys life was in danger, and Ratner needed to figure out why. He worried the culprit was bacterial meningitis, an infection of the membranes that protect the brain.What came back on her lab tests was something out of the history books.The infants meningitis was caused by invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b, or Hib, a type of bacteria that used to kill nearly 1,000 children a year in the U.S. A shot introduced in the late 1980s was so effective that Ratner, a veteran pediatric infectious disease doctor, was among the generations of physicians who had never seen a case. But the babys parents, Ratner learned, had chosen not to vaccinate her.Disheartened, he told his colleagues, This should be a never event.It wasnt. The following year, Ratner treated another infant with Hib, then another, each of them unvaccinated. Two went home, but one had to be discharged to a rehabilitation facility. That 5-month-old boy had huge black pupils that didnt respond to light, and he needed a ventilator to breathe. Ratner and his colleagues noted an absence of brain stem reflexes, indicating severe damage.The U.S. government took a half century to build a vaccination system that shielded children from such a fate. Its success depended on two fundamental pillars: parents trusting in vaccines and children having access to them. Both are now in peril, thanks in no small part to the man steering Americas health policy.Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who founded an antivaccine group and once likened the immunization of children to a holocaust, is transforming a government that long championed the lifesaving benefits of shots into one that spreads doubts about their safety here and abroad.Kennedy is also considering changes that could prompt the few companies that make vaccines for American kids to abandon the U.S. market, leaving parents who want the shots unable to get them.The threat to vaccine access reaches across the globe after Kennedy yanked the governments $1.6 billion pledge to the aid group that provides shots for the worlds poorest children. For decades, the U.S. had funded such work not just as a humanitarian mission but as a way to keep Americans safe from unchecked contagions.Kennedys efforts to reshape vaccine policies have been well chronicled, but ProPublica wanted to take a broader look at how the changes might affect Americans health in the years to come.We found that long-forgotten plagues have roared back, killing and maiming children in parts of the world where access to vaccines or trust in them faltered. What seemed like subtle changes to a countrys vaccine policies had disastrous consequences years later.Even in places that offer highly advanced health care, doctors have felt impotent trying to undo the damage when these horrors return. Modern medicine cant reverse paralysis from polio. Surgeons can intervene when a baby is born blind, deaf and with heart defects after being exposed to rubella in the womb, but the child is still likely to face a life shaped by disability.ProPublica reviewed hundreds of studies on vaccines and outbreaks of the diseases they prevent and interviewed more than three dozen people who have worked on U.S. immunization programs here and abroad, dating back to the days of smallpox. Some had never spoken publicly about their experiences.They shared a pit-of-the-stomach dread that American children will end up fighting for their lives against infections that have long been preventable.I think there always was a worst-case scenario, said Dr. Melinda Wharton, who retired last September after more than three decades leading immunization programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. I dont think I imagined it could or would be this bad.This week, Kennedys agency indicated it planned to appeal a federal court ruling that halted, at least temporarily, some of his changes. Among those was the decision to drop six diseases from the routine childhood immunization schedule.HHS declined to make Kennedy available for an interview. In an emailed response to detailed questions, HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon said that the agency has not limited access to or insurance coverage for vaccines. During the prior administration, federal health agencies told the public that questioning vaccine policy was off limits, Nixon said. That posture contributed to a collapse in trust in U.S. health care.Secretary Kennedy believes that trust is rebuilt through an open review of safety data, the willingness to ask the hard questions, and ensuring the American people have all emerging information as soon as we know it, he said.Vaccination rates have fallen in large swaths of the country. Resentful of how government institutions responded to the COVID-19 pandemic, many Americans lost trust in public health leaders. Antivaccine activists spread misinformation and recast the once-fringe practice of refusing shots as an exercise in medical freedom.A medical team assesses an infant for measles in Spartanburg, South Carolina, this year. The Washington Post via Getty ImagesNow the U.S. is experiencing a surge in measles not seen in three decades. There have been more than 3,600 cases across 46 states and three deaths since January last year. The virus spread so fast in South Carolina this year that some medical teams had to examine infected patients in their cars to protect vulnerable people in their waiting rooms, like they did during the worst days of COVID-19.Measles, among the most contagious diseases, is typically the first to infect undervaccinated communities and serves as a warning that other scourges will follow.Thats what happened in New York City where antivaccine forces distributed illustrated handouts that seeded fear in Orthodox Jewish communities. Ratner saw a direct line between a loss of trust and the sick children in his ICU first with measles in 2018 and 2019, then with Hib a few years later.Now the villainization of vaccines isnt coming from pamphlets passed out on a Brooklyn street corner. Its coming from the highest health offices in the U.S. government.Im worried, Ratner said, that were going back to a time where people die in childhood.The U.S. has been a leader on vaccination since the nations founding.During the Revolutionary War, George Washington ordered troops to be inoculated against smallpox, which had ravaged the Continental Army and was scaring away recruits. Washington knew the perils of the disease: His face was pocked with scars from his own teenage infection.The inoculation, the countrys first immunization mandate, took a primitive form. A sore from a smallpox patient was lanced, then the pus was inserted under a healthy persons skin. Though some people died, the resulting infection was, for the vast majority, milder than the type caught in a bunkhouse or on a battlefield.Washington gave the order in February 1777, keeping the matter as secret as possible so that the British wouldnt attack his bedridden troops during their monthlong recovery. Had he not carried out the inoculation, many historians have concluded, the British may have won.Nearly two centuries later, in the throes of the Cold War, CDC scientists teamed up with their counterparts from Americas archenemy, the Soviet Union, to wipe smallpox from the planet. They worked through the World Health Organization to track the virus in cities, rainforests and war zones, vaccinating those at risk. Four U.S. presidents, Democrats and Republicans, backed the work until the disease that had haunted humans since the days of the pharaohs was gone.Vaccines, for decades, werent politically divisive. They were so uncontroversial that McDonalds restaurants in the 1990s put the childhood immunization schedule on their tray liners.When the nations immunization program was in trouble in the 1980s, Republicans and Democrats stepped in to save it.Vaccine makers were abandoning the U.S. market after a flood of lawsuits alleged that the shot used at the time to protect children from diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough caused profoundly disabling seizures. Scientists later discovered genetic causes of some of the most devastating forms of epilepsy, but parents who sued back then won big verdicts and settlements.At one point pediatricians could only buy that shot from a single company, and there were shortages. The U.S. also was down to just one manufacturer for the measles-mumps-rubella shot and one for the polio vaccine.If there is a fire tomorrow in the plant where the polio vaccine is manufactured, what would happen? Rep. Henry Waxman asked the CDC director during a 1984 House subcommittee hearing.We would have a shortage, the director answered.An exasperated Waxman shot back: Are we going to then start putting money into iron lungs for polio victims?A liberal Democrat from California, Waxman for years worked with Sen. Paula Hawkins, a conservative Florida Republican, on legislation that stopped the exodus of vaccine makers by limiting their liability. Launched in 1988, the federal Vaccine Injury Compensation Program pays people who suffer rare but serious side effects, using money from a special tax on certain shots. The program maintains a table of injuries that are eligible for quicker payouts, and a dedicated vaccine court rules on cases involving health problems not listed on the table.Those who dont like what they are offered can still sue vaccine makers in traditional civil courts, but a Supreme Court ruling significantly limited the types of cases that can win there.Just as the compensation program was getting off the ground, measles laid bare a different weakness in the immunization system. The disease tore through American cities, hitting Black and Hispanic preschoolers especially hard. Between 1989 and 1991, there were more than 55,000 cases and 123 deaths.In June 1991, President George H.W. Bush, a Republican, stepped into the White House Rose Garden with a message for every parent everywhere in America: Please, make sure your child is immunized.He announced that a special team of health officials was investigating why so many kids were missing their shots.While some say each generation repeats the mistakes of the last, no generation in America should suffer the plagues of the past, Bush said.The problem was access. Parents couldnt afford the vaccines given at pediatricians offices.Bushs successor, President Bill Clinton, a Democrat, ushered in a program that to this day offers free shots through local doctors to more than half of American kids.Vaccination rates climbed, and measles cases dropped precipitously. By 2000, the U.S. had stopped local spread of the virus so well that global health authorities declared it eliminated here.Having made progress at home, the U.S. government championed the use of vaccines abroad. Dr. Susan Reef, who had trained in the CDC disease-detective program made famous by Kate Winslets character in the movie Contagion, crisscrossed the globe showing health officials how they could save babies from birth defects and early death by introducing the rubella vaccine.The cloudy eye of this 3-year-old is from glaucoma caused by congenital rubella syndrome, a constellation of problems resulting from exposure to rubella while in utero. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Dr. Andre J. LebrunAlso known as German measles, rubella is usually mild in kids and adults. When people get infected very early in pregnancy, though, they face up to a 90% chance of giving birth to a baby with congenital rubella syndrome. About a third of those infants die before their first birthday. Most survivors have deafness, blindness, heart defects or intellectual disabilities. Before the vaccine, a U.S. epidemic in the mid-1960s led to 20,000 babies born with the syndrome.Reef and her CDC colleagues helped foreign health authorities set up surveillance systems that identified newborns with congenital rubella syndrome.During a 2011 rubella epidemic in Vietnam, Reef spotted a cluster of tiny bassinets in a Ho Chi Minh City intensive care unit. The babies eyes had cataracts, a sign of vision loss. She knew that most would have trouble hearing, if they could hear at all. A collaborator from the WHO told Reef that at least one of the infants had been abandoned by his family.Doctors had isolated the contagious newborns to prevent the spread of rubella, a sign the countrys surveillance system was working. But the scene of this preventable suffering, Reef said, broke my heart.Vietnam launched a national rubella immunization program a few years later.When Reefs work began, less than half the worlds countries had introduced a rubella shot. When she retired in 2022 after a 30-year career at the CDC, all but 19 had.For half a century, one idea lay at the core of all U.S. immunization programs: Let down your guard and the diseases will return.Dr. Chuck Vitek saw this happen as he walked the worn linoleum floors of Russian infectious disease hospitals in the mid-1990s.Throughout that decade, a massive epidemic of diphtheria raged across the countries of the former Soviet Union. The CDC repeatedly deployed Vitek to help health authorities contain this ancient contagion, once widely known as the strangling angel of children.Tissue destroyed by the diphtheria toxin can build up in the back of a childs throat, sealing off the swollen airway and suffocating them. Photo By BSIP/UIG via Getty ImagesDiphtherias name is drawn from the Greek word for leather because tissue destroyed by the diphtheria toxin builds up in the back of the throat like a piece of hide, sealing off a swollen airway. Many parents had to watch their children suffocate. For those who escape asphyxiation, the toxin can damage the heart and nerves. Patients who seem better can drop dead weeks later.At one hospital, Vitek peered into the mouth of a sick Russian teenager and saw the thick greyish-white membrane covering a third of his throat. Doctors had administered antitoxin promptly, so his windpipe wasnt blocked. But, pale and weak, the boy faced a terrible wait. Had diphtheria ruined his heart?Vitek had to leave before it was clear whether the child would survive. But one detail from his medical history stood out above all others: The teen had not been vaccinated.It was sad because it was something that would have easily been prevented with vaccination, Vitek recalled.Vitek was another graduate of the CDCs disease-detective program. A big part of his assignment was to investigate why diphtheria had come back. One obvious problem was access; the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 disrupted vaccine supplies. But that wasnt the whole answer.The unvaccinated Russian boy offered a clue to the rest.The Soviets had been big believers in immunization. Diphtheria shots for kids had been free and mandatory since the 1950s.When diphtheria seemed like a problem of the past, though, the Soviet Union eased up. Concerns about fevers and other possible side effects from the shot used back then overshadowed fears of the disease. In the 1980s, Soviet health authorities created alternative immunization schedules with lower-dose diphtheria shots and fewer total injections, and they directed pediatricians to put off vaccination if a child had one of a long list of health issues. If a kid had a runny nose, a stomachache, almost anything, Vitek said, doctors would skip the shot that day. They wouldnt make an effort to catch them up.Antivaccine activists tapped into the deep mistrust of government institutions in the years leading up to the collapse of the Soviet Union. One 1988 column in a Moscow newspaper suggested that Soviet officials knew the shot could be harmful even deadly but kept this secret. (In focus groups held years later, parents vividly recalled how news stories made them afraid of immunizations, Vitek and a colleague found.)By 1990, only 60% of infants in Soviet Russia had received all three full-strength diphtheria shots before their first birthday.The disease found a foothold. Before the epidemic was over, more than 157,000 people were infected and 5,000 died, mostly in Russia.Health officials in Russia ended the policies that left their people vulnerable and held mandatory mass vaccination campaigns.It was an extra dose across the entire population, Vitek recalled.It took years to end the epidemic.Japan had a similar struggle with rubella.A rash from rubella, also known as German measles Centers for Disease Control and PreventionWhen health authorities introduced a rubella shot in the 1970s, they took an approach that weighed who was most at risk, targeting future mothers by giving the shot only to junior high girls. The boys of this era were passed over and remained susceptible as they grew up. Rubella researchers refer to them as the lost generation.In 1989, Japan changed course and began vaccinating young boys and girls with a shot that combined protection for rubella, measles and mumps. But doctors quickly discovered that the mumps component different from the U.S. version sometimes caused a type of meningitis. Mistrust spread as health officials downplayed the risk at first, then yanked the combined vaccines in favor of standalone shots.Japan in 1994 dropped its strict immunization mandates. Health authorities continued to recommend shots, but vaccination became a matter of personal choice, and a lack of trust shadowed the immunization program for years. One study showed Japans confidence in vaccines was among the lowest in the world.Time and again, rubella circulated in the men who were never offered the shots as boys, then spread to pregnant women who hadnt been fully vaccinated. Babies were born with the type of devastating birth defects that Reef saw in the ICU in Vietnam. Japans epidemic from 2012 to 2014 was so bad that researchers discovered a temporary drop in the countrys fertility rates that coincided with a spike in Google searches for the Japanese word for rubella.Serious misgivings about vaccination in one part of the world can have far-reaching consequences. Twenty countries that thought their days of paralytic polio were behind them saw the dreaded disease return in the 2000s. The virus was traced to Nigeria, where religious and political leaders in some areas had boycotted polio immunization campaigns amid false rumors that the shots had been tainted to make Muslim girls infertile.Organizers of the boycott feared the vaccine more than the disease.The governor of one northern Nigerian state told the Associated Press in 2004: It is a lesser of two evils to sacrifice two, three, four, five, even 10 children [to polio] than allow hundreds or thousands or possibly millions of girl-children likely to be rendered infertile.Polio roared back in Nigeria, leaving more than 2,500 children disabled. It spread around the world for years, paralyzing kids as far away as Indonesia.When Kennedy became Americas top health official last year, no other leader at the CDC had more experience preventing death and disability with vaccines than Dr. Melinda Wharton.It was Wharton who had sent Vitek to Russia to figure out why diphtheria returned. And it was Wharton who started Reef on her quest to vanquish congenital rubella syndrome. Like them, she had trained as a disease detective.In her 39 years at the CDC, Wharton had seen activists try to persuade Americans that the shots they were giving their babies were scarier than the diseases those shots prevented. In 2021, Kennedy had written in a book that measles a virus the CDC says kills nearly 1 to 3 of every 1,000 children who contract it wasnt the menace that the government proclaimed.Measles outbreaks have been fabricated to create fear that in turn forces government officials to do something, he wrote. They then inflict unnecessary and risky vaccines on millions of children for the sole purpose of fattening industry profits.During his confirmation hearings, Kennedy told senators he isnt antivaccine. I am pro-safety, he said. I worked for years to raise awareness about the mercury and toxic chemicals in fish, and nobody called me anti-fish.In his early days as the nations top health leader, HHS dismissed thousands of Whartons colleagues, ended vaccine promotions during an especially deadly flu season and buried a CDC measles forecast that stressed the need for immunization.A measles rash covers a childs torso. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Dr. Philip NaderWharton set five empty cardboard boxes on her filing cabinet in case she needed to pack up quickly.In recent years she managed the committee of outside experts that recommends which shots Americans should get and when. Few people had ever heard of her obscure corner of the federal health bureaucracy.But Kennedy knew it well. He understood that Congress had given these advisers the power to determine which shots were free for more than half of American kids and which ones insurers must pay for. Many states used the committees recommendations to set vaccine mandates for kids attending school.Kennedy for years complained the panel had been captured by Big Pharma. On June 9, his chief of staff at the CDC removed Wharton from her role managing the committee. Just as that news was sinking in, Whartons phone lit up with messages from the committees members. Kennedy had announced in a Wall Street Journal column that he was replacing all of them. A clean sweep is needed to re-establish public confidence in vaccine science, he wrote.Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Kayla Bartkowski/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesKennedy stacked the new committee with many vaccine skeptics who quickly delved into his longstanding grievances about Americas immunization system. Webcasts of the meetings became a megaphone for mistrust. Some devolved into shouting matches as doctors from medical societies pushed back against misinformation.One of Kennedys new appointees, Retsef Levi, a professor of operations management at the MIT Sloan School of Management, suggested that vaccinating a baby was like flying on an airplane that hadnt been rigorously tested. I suggest to parents to be very, very suspicious when people tell them that something is safe, especially a vaccine, he said.In an emailed response to questions from ProPublica, Levi said that vaccines have benefits and risks often personalized to the individuals health status, risk factors, and preferences. Being transparent about those benefits and risks, including being honest about what is known and not known, increases public confidence in vaccination programs, he said.The chair of the committee, Dr. Kirk Milhoan, told the Why Should I Trust You? podcast he wasnt afraid to reconsider whether the polio shot is needed any longer. In an email to ProPublica, Milhoan, a pediatric cardiologist, said that the committee is required to review vaccines every seven years to optimize effectiveness and to reevaluate possible long term risks.Like Kennedy, Milhoan doesnt think vaccines have been appropriately tested for safety. In the podcast, he said American parents deserve to know the risks so they can decide whether theyre more concerned about the disease or the potential for side effects from the shot.What we are doing is returning individual autonomy to the first order, not public health, he added.Since she retired last year, Wharton has tuned in to the meetings she used to run, but at times they were too painful to watch. The new committee at one point sought advice from a former president of the antivaccination group Kennedy founded, while a CDC compilation of evidence that ran counter to her presentation was quietly removed from the panels website. For insight on the childhood schedule, the panel listened to a 90-minute talk by a Kennedy ally, a vaccine-injury attorney who once petitioned the government to withdraw approval of the polio shot for infants and toddlers.In January, the acting CDC director trimmed the childhood immunization schedule so that it recommended routine protection for 11 diseases rather than 17. Six shots that had been universal would now fall into a category that essentially means talk to your doctor and decide for yourself, with guidance for certain shots based on risk.The idea that its increasingly acceptable to put children at risk for these kinds of things is really just terrible, Wharton said. To have it be the official position of the federal government, its very frightening.Nixon, the HHS spokesperson, defended the slimmed-down schedule, saying it would maintain robust protection against diseases that cause serious morbidity or mortality to children while aligning the U.S. with peer nations.As for the committee, Nixon said Kennedys appointees are committed to rigorous review and independent thinking.Restoring confidence requires advisory bodies that are willing to ask hard questions, not simply reaffirm prior consensus and rubber stamp recommendations, he said. Disagreement at public meetings is a healthy scientific debate and the way to overcome groupthink.The American Academy of Pediatrics, which for decades had collaborated with the committee on the childhood vaccine schedule, boycotted the panels meetings and sued to block many of Kennedys moves.On Monday, a federal judge sided with the academy, finding that for an advisory committee dedicated to using vaccines to control preventable diseases, more than half of the new members appear distinctly unqualified. While he considers the case, the judge, for now, put on hold Kennedys appointments to the panel as well as the CDCs changes to the childhood vaccine schedule.The ruling is a setback for Kennedy, but the Trump administration has foreshadowed other changes that could affect Americans access to shots.President Donald Trump, with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., addresses reporters during a press conference in the White House. Francis Chung/Politico/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesIn September, President Donald Trump stepped up to the microphone in the White Houses Roosevelt Room with a major announcement about his administrations efforts to counter the rise of autism. Flanked by Kennedy and other top health officials, the president urged pregnant women not to take acetaminophen, the pain reliever often sold as Tylenol. This news ricocheted around the globe.But less attention was given to other bombshells dropped about vaccines that day. The president complained that pediatricians were giving so many shots, they were treating Americas children like horses.They pump so much stuff into those beautiful little babies, its a disgrace, he said.Without explaining how, Trump said his administration was going to get aluminum removed from vaccines. Who the hell wants that pumped into a body? he said.Aluminum has been used in shots since the 1930s to boost immune response. It is an essential ingredient in vaccines for nine diseases, including diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, human papillomavirus (a cause of cervical cancer), one version of the Hib vaccine, and many of the combination shots babies receive. Kennedy has long questioned its safety.A CDC-sponsored study found an association between aluminum in shots and asthma in young kids. But the researchers, citing limitations in their analysis, wrote that these findings do not constitute strong evidence for questioning the safety of aluminum in vaccines. A larger study by Danish government researchers subsequently found aluminum in shots did not increase the risk of autism, asthma, autoimmune diseases or dozens of other conditions. Kennedy criticized the methodology and tried unsuccessfully to get the Danish study retracted.If the federal government were to ban aluminum in vaccines, companies would have to reformulate them and, possibly, launch costly clinical trials. Nearly all the shots American kids get are made by a handful of pharmaceutical giants. The market is fragile enough that if any were to balk and stop making these vaccines, families could face shortages or lose access altogether.The fate of the measles-mumps-rubella shot, which does not contain aluminum, is also up in the air. At the White House autism press conference, Trump, without offering evidence, said he had heard bad things about that shot, which has been used here since 1971. Researchers around the world repeatedly have found it does not cause autism.Nevertheless, the president implored parents to insist on separate shots for measles, mumps and rubella separate, separate, separate, he repeated.But there are no FDA-approved standalone shots for measles, mumps or rubella. Facing a year with the most American measles cases in a generation, the president had suggested that theres a problem with the only surefire prevention available and told parents to demand shots that dont exist here.In an X post, the acting CDC director at that time called on manufacturers to develop them.A measles rash covers the face and shoulders of a young boy. Centers for Disease Control and PreventionA White House spokesperson did not answer questions about the presidents plans.The Trump administration is committed to a nuanced, nimble, and multi-faceted approach to restore Gold Standard Science as the guiding principle of our health policymaking without compromising access to or coverage of any lifesaving treatment, including vaccines, Kush Desai wrote in an email. Until unveiled by the Administration, discussion about potential new policies or their second order effects is pointless speculation.The federal court ruling that paused Januarys revisions to the childhood vaccination schedule doesnt stop Kennedy from making similar changes in the future, as long as he follows the proper procedures. While moving shots to the talk-to-your-doctor category may seem harmless, it could affect access down the line.The injury compensation program that Congress created to prevent manufacturers from fleeing the U.S. market in the 1980s only covers immunizations the CDC recommends for routine administration to children or pregnant women. That leaves shots in other categories open to legal challenges by vaccine injury lawyers, renewing the specter of big legal verdicts that previously prompted vaccine makers to bolt.Kennedy has long railed against the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, arguing its a gift to the pharmaceutical industry that removes any incentive to make safe products. Before he became HHS secretary, Kennedy referred plaintiffs to a law firm suing a vaccine maker in exchange for a cut of its fees if they won, federal financial disclosures show.Last year, he hired a vaccine injury lawyer to help him overhaul the compensation program and expand who can receive payments. In September, that attorney said he and Kennedy were considering ways to add symptoms of autism to the programs injury table for quick payouts.So many studies performed in different parts of the world and involving more than a million people have found no link between vaccines and autism that this has become scientific consensus. (Scientists have found serious methodological flaws in papers that have claimed such a link.) The compensation programs vaccine court spent years in the 2000s trying cases that alleged shots caused autism and found they didnt. ProPublica asked HHS whether Kennedy planned to add symptoms of autism to the programs injury table, but the agency did not answer.Given how prevalent autism is, a change like this could exhaust the compensation fund. If the program collapses and the legal protections go away, manufacturers may stop selling shots here like they did in the 1980s.Then, even Americans who still trust vaccines couldnt get them.A child suffering from Haemophilus influenzae type B, or Hib American Association of PediatricsDiseases that have been wiped out in the U.S. are still found in other parts of the world.Polio is endemic in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and this month the CDC warned American travelers that the virus has been circulating in 28 additional countries, including Israel and the United Kingdom. In 2022, a young unvaccinated man in New York was paralyzed by the virus.That same year, an outbreak of diphtheria began in Western Europe, its largest rise in cases in 70 years. Health authorities investigating the infection of an unvaccinated German boy in 2024 discovered that the toxic strain of the diphtheria bacteria had spread over two years from newly arrived migrants to homeless Germans, then to the child and his mother, who had no known contact with either group.The 10-year-old was admitted to a hospital in the historic city of Potsdam. Like Ratner encountering his first patient with Hib, the German doctors had never seen diphtheria before.It was taught as history, said Dr. Bernhard Kosak, head of pediatric emergency medicine and critical care there.Treated with antitoxin and antibiotics, the child was transferred to the big teaching hospital in Berlin where a ventilator helped him breathe. But the marvels of modern intensive-care medicine couldnt undo the damage from this ancient toxin. The boy died in January last year.Diseases can follow the contours of global travel. In just the first few months of last year, the CDC found, people infected with measles arrived in the U.S. from Canada, Vietnam, Mexico, Pakistan, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Australia, Guinea, the Netherlands, Somalia, Spain and Uganda.The Trump administration has walked away from long-standing international alliances that helped the U.S. beat back scourges in other countries. The president withdrew the U.S. from the WHO. And Kennedy backed out of the governments promise to give $1.6 billion to Gavi, the global vaccine aid group the U.S. has funded for decades. He accused the organization of neglecting vaccine safety.Secretary Kennedy has made clear that American public health dollars going abroad must be spent wisely, Nixon, the HHS spokesperson, said. That means reviewing funding commitments and ensuring programs meet safety and effectiveness standards. Protecting Americans at home remains our first obligation.Reef, the former CDC doctor who had witnessed newborns suffering from congenital rubella syndrome in Vietnam, is devastated by the pullback.It makes me very very sad, she said, then paused for a long time. Very very sad. I cant explain to you what it feels like to see all your hard work going by the wayside.In retirement, she remains part of the group of experts that helps governments decide when to introduce the rubella vaccine and also serves on four WHO committees that determine whether nations have eliminated rubella or measles.When countries launch rubella vaccination campaigns for the first time, they cant just target babies or the virus shifts to older groups and can infect those who are pregnant. To avoid this, Gavi for many years supported immunizing all children from 9 months old up to age 15 when countries first introduce the shot, which offers protection not just for rubella but also for measles.But facing a massive hole in its budget, Gavis board in December decided in the future to save money by only guaranteeing that vaccine up to age 10 when a country first debuts it. Modeling predicts the change could result in 72,000 additional deaths from measles and congenital rubella syndrome, according to the Gavi boards records.A Gavi spokesperson acknowledged that the shift creates a greater risk of congenital rubella but said that the organization had to figure out how to protect as many people as it could with far less money. Countries that want to offer the vaccine to older kids, she noted, can draw from a different pot of Gavi money, but that will leave those places with less funding for other shots.Fallout from the budget cuts goes well beyond rubella. The bottom line is that, over the next five years, we expect to be able to prevent 600,000 future deaths less than if we were fully funded, the spokesperson said.Addressing Kennedys criticism, the spokesperson added, Gavis utmost concern is the health and safety of children. Our approach to vaccine safety is guided entirely by global scientific consensus.Cataracts caused by congenital rubella syndrome Centers for Disease Control and PreventionThe spread of measles in the U.S. warns of future rubella outbreaks. Since the rubella shot here is given in combination with the vaccine for measles and mumps, parents who turn down measles vaccines leave their kids vulnerable to rubella, too. It could take 20 years before birth defects from rubella become common again. Unvaccinated children have to grow old enough to become pregnant. The long lag time can give a false sense of security.But, Reef warned, when it comes back, it will come back with a vengeance. We will see babies being born who are blind, deaf and have heart disease.The world is ill prepared for a major resurgence in diphtheria. Antitoxin, made from the blood of horses, has to be given immediately. Yet supplies are scarce, and not many companies sell it. Dozens of kids in Pakistan died in 2024 because doctors there couldnt get it in time.Vitek, the CDC doctor who fought diphtheria in Russia, helped obtain permission for the CDC to keep an emergency stash of antitoxin for Americans after the only manufacturer with FDA approval stopped making it. The U.S. medical system still relies on an emergency supply controlled by the CDC.ProPublica asked the CDC and HHS how many diphtheria patients the governments current supply could treat, but neither agency would say. (The CDC vigilantly monitors disease trends, maintains emergency stockpiles, and supports outbreak response at home and abroad, Nixon said.)Vitek retired in July after 33 years with the CDC, but he still worries how diseases that seem vanquished can reappear if people cant or wont get shots.The unvaccinated parts of America could find themselves, like Germany, one unwitting traveler away from an outbreak of a horror from the history books.Once it gets reintroduced, your kid could get sick or die, even with modern medicine, Vitek warned. And diphtheria, he noted, its a terrible way to die.Do You Have a Tip for ProPublica? Help Us Do Journalism.Got a story we should hear? Are you down to be a background source on a story about your community, your schools or your workplace? Get in touch.Send Us Your TipThe post How Robert F. Kennedy Jr.s Vaccine Agenda Risks a Resurgence of Deadly Childhood Plagues appeared first on ProPublica.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 34 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
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