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The REAL reason farmers and truckers are rising up all around the world
Farmers around the world are rising up to protest regulations that are threatening to destroy not just their industry — but the countries they’ve learned to thrive in.
France, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain have all seen recent protests against these regulations. In France, entire herds of livestock have been led into the city to stop traffic, and manure has been sprayed on government buildings.
“This is not just an American problem,” Glenn Beck comments. “What they’re protesting is about to affect every single citizen on planet Earth.”
The protests are a reaction to the actions of global elites, who allege that they’re trying to save the environment.
One of those elites is John Kerry, who, at the recent AIM for Climate Summit, was adamant that agriculture is a problem for the environment.
“Agriculture contributes about 33% of all emissions of the world,” he told the audience. “Depending a little bit on how you count it, but it’s anywhere from 26% to 33%, and we can’t get to net zero, we don’t get this job done, unless agriculture is front and center as part of the solution.”
“You can’t just continue to both warm the planet while also expecting to feed it. Doesn’t work. So we have to reduce emissions from the food system,” he added.
“I’m not an expert on this, but has anybody considered how many people will go hungry in the race to eliminate 30%?” Glenn asks. “Did they factor in how many ranchers and farmers will be forced into poverty? Have they thought about the ramifications of something that has taken us thousands of years to perfect — to change it in a four-year-period?”
To learn more, watch the video below.
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BlackRock CEO Larry Fink just revealed his plan to 'FORCE behaviors'
Surely by now you’ve heard of BlackRock, the largest money management company on the planet, that is spearheading ESG scores and driving up the price of homes in the U.S.
And even though the firm has $10 trillion in assets under its management, Larry Fink, the chairman and CEO, isn’t satisfied.
He also needs to control you.
Here are a few things Mr. Fink said at a recent conference:
“Behaviors are going to have to change.”
“You have to force behaviors, and at BlackRock, we are forcing behaviors.”
“If you don’t achieve these levels of impact, your compensation could be impacted.”
Pat Gray is outraged by the flagrant overreach.
“Force is the plan of Satan,” he says. “It is the opposite of God's plan for us, and it's the opposite of everything this nation was founded on and stands for.”
“We gotta stand up to this ESG situation, this diversity and equity garbage,” he continues.
“BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street – I mean, those are the companies that … run the show,” adds Keith Malinak.
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ABC News' Dax Tejera died from choking amid 'acute alcohol intoxication' — not from a heart attack as news network originally indicated
ABC News' Dax Tejera died from choking amid "acute alcohol intoxication," USA Today reported — not of a heart attack as the news network originally indicated in December.
What are the details?
USA Today — citing the New York City Office of Chief Medical Examiner — said the 37-year-old executive producer died Dec. 23 from "asphyxia due to obstruction of airway by food bolus complicating acute alcohol intoxication."
Tejera's death also was ruled an accident, USA Today reported.
Kim Godwin, president of ABC News, issued a staff memo at the time of Tejera's passing that indicated he died "suddenly of a heart attack," the Hollywood Reporter said.
Fox News said ABC News did not immediately respond to its request for comment.
In addition, Tejera's wife, Veronica, was charged in early January after police said she and her husband left their 5-month-old girl and 2-year-old girl unattended while the couple went out to dinner on the evening Dax Tejera died.
A spokesperson for the NYPD’s public information office told Variety that Veronica Tejera was booked on two counts of “acting in a manner injurious to a child."
Police said they responded to a report of unattended children at the address of the Yale Club, a members-only Manhattan hotel.
According to the New York Post, Veronica Tejera said in a statement that when her husband collapsed, she accompanied him to the hospital and asked her parents and a close friend to watch their children “as I monitored them by camera.”
But she said the hotel wouldn’t allow her friend in and called police instead, the Post noted.
However, the Post — citing sources — said "the children were left unattended for much longer while the two went out on the town at Bobby Van’s 230Park, around the corner from the private club, before Dax Tejera, 37, collapsed outside the eatery."
Veronica Tejera was given a desk ticket and released.
Anything else?
Dax Tejera was executive producer of the ABC News Sunday public affairs program "This Week," the Reporter said.
Congressional correspondent Rachel Scott reported on Tejera's death and said he "will be deeply missed by all of us here at ABC News":
\u201c.@RachelvScott reports on the sudden passing of Dax Tejera, the Executive Producer of @ABCThisWeek. In a memo to employees, @ABC President Kim Godwin said that Dax's passion and love for the show shined every Sunday morning.\u201d— World News Tonight (@World News Tonight) 1671933614
War zone in Mexico: 30 die during arrest of El Chapo's son; video shows Sinaloa Cartel retaliate by burning city, shooting commercial airplanes, trying to kidnap doctors
Mexican authorities arrested the son of notorious Mexican drug cartel leader Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman on Thursday. The Sinaloa drug cartel has retaliated by turning a city in Mexico into a fiery war zone.
Mission to arrest El Chapo's son
A significant Mexican military force swooped into the city of Culiacan to take Ovidio Guzman into custody. The Mexican army ordered Blackhawk helicopter gunships to attack a convoy of 25 cartel vehicles – some sporting machine guns.
Mexican law enforcement was able to arrest Guzman. However, 10 Mexican military personnel and one Culiacan policeman were killed during the operation, according to Defense Secretary Luis Cresencio Sandoval. There were 17 police officers and 35 military personnel injured during the firefight. Authorities believe 19 members of the Sinaloa drug cartel died during the mission.
A Mexican military aircraft conducted a strafing run against Sinaloa Cartel members, according to The Drive.
\u201cWar has broken out between Mexican Defense Forces and the Sinaloa Cartel in Culiacan in response to the arrest of El Chapo\u2019s son.\n\nMore footage will be added in the thread below as it emerges.\u201d— Libertarian Party Mises Caucus (@Libertarian Party Mises Caucus) 1672954902
\u201cThe son of imprisoned drug kingpin \u201cEl Chapo\u201d has been arrested by authorities in Mexico. The pre-dawn military operation sparked gunfights and roadblocks across the city where the Sinaloa drug cartel is headquartered. @mattriversabc reports. https://t.co/47JbkrfG9v\u201d— World News Tonight (@World News Tonight) 1672977631
\u201cAeronaves de la Fuerza A\u00e9rea sobrevuelan la Ciudad de Culiacan en Sinaloa\u201d— M\u00e9xico Aeroespacial y Defensa (@M\u00e9xico Aeroespacial y Defensa) 1672945924
Sinaloa cartel launches violent campaign to free Ovidio Guzman
The Sinaloa Cartel set the city of Culiacan on fire in an attempt to force Mexican authorities to free Guzman.
According to Fox News, "The violence became so heavy that Sinaloa Gov. Ruben Rocha said cartel members showed up at local hospitals attempting to kidnap doctors to take them back to the front lines and treat wounded fighters."
Rocha said, "It got to the point that at one moment, the doctors were saying, ‘We’re getting out of here.'"
El Pais reported, "Witnesses who spoke to El Pais paint a picture of terror, where packs of armed criminals, on motorcycles or on foot, played cat and mouse with the authorities. Roberto, a painter who left home shortly before 10 a.m. on Thursday, said the criminals seized his car at gunpoint: 'I don’t know what a war zone is like, but I think it’s the same thing,' he said."
The cartel set cars, buses, and tractor-trailers on fire as roadblocks across the city. The drug cartel blocked 19 roads and highways in Culiacan. The cartel wanted to prevent the Mexican military from transporting Guzman to the Culiacan airport.
Two military planes landed at the airport and deployed more troops to secure the airport.
Law enforcement was able to transport Guzman to the airport, but the cartel launched a last-ditch offensive. The Sinaloa Cartel shot at a military plane and a commercial airliner in an effort to stop Guzman from being flown out of the city.
The Aeromexico airliner attempted to take off from the runway, but was hit by gunfire. Passengers threw themselves to the floor of the plane to dodge the gunfire. The commercial airliner was forced to retreat to the terminal.
The New York Post reported that the plane's engine had been hit during the shooting, which caused a leak. None of the passengers were injured.
The Sinaloa Cartel grounded two military aircraft after the planes were hit with "a significant number of impacts," Sandoval said. The cartel soldiers were reportedly firing Barrett .50 caliber anti-materiel rifles at the planes.
\u201cSinaloa Cartel firing a .50 Cal Barrett anti-materiel rifle at a plane of the Mexican Air Force near the Culiac\u00e1n Airport following the arrest of El Chapo\u2019s son Ovidio\u201d— Sara A. Carter (@Sara A. Carter) 1673019931
\u201cIn an act of terrorism, a war has broken out between Mexican Defense Forces and the Sinaloa Cartel in Culiacan in response to the arrest of El Chapo\u2019s son. Where the cartel has now been shooting at commercial airliners with 50-caliber weapons; some arguing provided by the ATF.\u201d— Joshua Rodriguez (@Joshua Rodriguez) 1672959875
The U.S. wants Guzman
Mexican authorities snuck Guzman into a military helicopter and flew the 32-year-old drug kingpin to Mexico City. Guzman is reportedly in a maximum-security prison near Toluca.
"Guzman was indicted by the United States on drug trafficking charges in 2018. According to both governments, he had assumed a growing role among his brothers in carrying on their father’s business, along with long- time cartel boss Ismael 'El Mayo' Zambada," according to CNBC.
Foreign Affairs Secretary Marcelo Ebrard confirmed the Mexican government received a 2019 request from the United States for Guzman's arrest, and that the U.S. wants to extradite the suspected drug lord.
Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman is serving a life sentence at a Colorado supermax federal prison after being convicted of criminal enterprise and cocaine distribution in 2019.
President Joe Biden is scheduled to travel to the southern border on Sunday – his first such visit since taking office. Biden is set to visit Mexico next week for the North American Leaders' Summit – which will include meetings with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Lopez Obrador.
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