Tag Archives: Farmer

‘AGT: Fantasy League’: Who is ventriloquist Darci Lynne Farmer? – Deseret News

  1. ‘AGT: Fantasy League’: Who is ventriloquist Darci Lynne Farmer? Deseret News
  2. Darci Lynne Returns to ‘AGT: Fantasy League’ With an Exciting Twist She Calls Darci 2.0 Parade Magazine
  3. Ventriloquist Darci Lynne was 12 when she won ‘AGT.’ Now she’s competing on a spinoff — with her sassy puppet Petunia Yahoo Entertainment
  4. ‘America’s Got Talent’ winner Darci Lynne to release debut single, ‘Push Our Luck,’ on Feb. 5 Niagara Frontier Publications
  5. Inside Darci Lynne’s AGT Return and Stunning Take on “I’ve Got the Music in Me” NBC Insider

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“Farmer Wants A Wife”: Hunter And Meghan’s Happily Ever After – Southern Living

  1. “Farmer Wants A Wife”: Hunter And Meghan’s Happily Ever After Southern Living
  2. Farmer Wants a Wife’s Meghan Baker returns to the show FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth
  3. ‘Farmer Wants A Wife’ Couple Hunter & Meghan Give A Relationship Update After ‘Dating In Secret’ (Exclusive) HollywoodLife
  4. Hunter and Meghan Share a ‘Farmer Wants a Wife’ Update: “We’re Moving at Our Own Pace” (EXCLUSIVE) Distractify
  5. Exclusive: Check Out This Sneak Peek From The Season Finale Of “Farmer Wants A Wife” Southern Living
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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FSU football: Joshua Farmer removes name from transfer portal, will stay with Seminoles – Tomahawk Nation

  1. FSU football: Joshua Farmer removes name from transfer portal, will stay with Seminoles Tomahawk Nation
  2. FSU defensive tackle Joshua Farmer now officially appears in the NCAA Transfer Portal, removed from FSU roster 247Sports
  3. Five positions Florida could look to improve through the transfer portal GatorCountry.com
  4. Florida State Defensive Tackle Officially Enters NCAA Transfer Portal Sports Illustrated
  5. Joshua Farmer withdraws his name from the NCAA Transfer Portal, returns to FSU’s official roster 247Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Food fraud secretly infiltrates America. Here’s how you can avoid it

The food in your kitchen cabinets may not be what it seems.

“I guarantee you any time a product can be passed off as something more expensive, it will be. It’s that simple,” Larry Olmsted, author of “Real Food/Fake Food,” told CNBC.

Fraudsters motivated by economic gain secretly infiltrate the global food market through a variety of means, including counterfeits, dilutions, substitution and mislabeling.

This not only harms consumers’ wallets, but it also puts public health and safety at risk.

Some estimates say food fraud affects at least 1% of the global food industry at a cost as high as $40 billion a year, according to the Food and Drug Administration.

“We might not know the overall impact of food fraud because so much of what fraudsters do is hidden from us and has been for centuries.” Kristie Laurvick, senior manager of the foods program at the U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention, told CNBC.

Even the FDA says it can’t estimate how often this fraud happens or its economic impact.

“Be aware of the product that you put on you or plug in the wall,” John Spink, director of the Food Fraud Prevention Think Tank, told CNBC.

Between 2012 and 2021, the most common type food fraud was lying about an animal’s origin and dilution or substitution, both ranking at 16% of recorded incidents by food-safety monitor Food Chain ID.

For example, dilution could entail adding a cheaper vegetable oil to an expensive extra virgin olive oil.

“If I drink scotch, I couldn’t tell you [the] difference between a $50 bottle and a $5,000 bottle. So, I know I could be deceived at that point,” Spink said.

The Food Fraud Prevention Think Tank suggests five questions a consumer can ask themselves to reduce their vulnerability to product fraud.

  1. What type of product is it? Take extra caution with any product that you put on your body, ingest or plug in the wall.
  2. Can you recognize the difference between products?
  3. Do you know the retailer or supplier? Do you trust them?
  4. Are you shopping online? If so, did you find the online supplier from a reliable source?
  5. Complain. Is the supplier legitimate? If so, they will want to know.

Watch the video above to learn more about the different types of food fraud, how the industry is preventing risk, what consumers can do and where fraud in the olive oil, spices and seafood markets may be lurking.

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Yes, I Will Explain the Lesbian Farmer Emu Flu Drama to You

Image: TikTok; @knucklebumpfarms

Huge news for those closely following the health and well-being of Emmanuel the emu who have not yet been deterred by his clout-chasing owner’s history of online racism: He does not have Avian bird flu! He’s just stressed out. This isn’t the greatest saga ever told, but it is a saga, and I am going to tell it.

Quickly, before we dive in—on the off-chance that you’ve let half of this discourse seep into your brain, I’m discussing Taylor Blake, NOT the other, unproblematic (as far as we know) emu influencer who works at Useless Farm and has an emu named Karen that keeps trying to murder her on camera.

Pre-Avian flu scare, Emmanuel the emu first went viral (no pun intended) this past summer. Taylor Blake, his owner and the head of Knuckle Bump Farms in South Florida, was doing this bit where she would try to post farm education videos to TikTok, but was consistently being interrupted by the emu craning his lanky emu neck into the frame, curious as to what was going on. Blake would, much to the delight of her viewers, chastise him by using his full Christian name, Emmanuel Todd Lopez. The duo reached such a height of viral fame that Blake was interviewed by both the Washington Post and the Tonight Show. The niche drama seemed so wholesome and fun-loving, but would ultimately taper out the way most five minutes of fame do: quickly and quietly! Of course, things are not always as they seem.

Turns out this was not Blake’s first rodeo: The farmer has presented many versions of herself over the years. While it took a moment, the terminally online among us soon recognized her from her previous stunts, like going viral for recording herself in 2015 asking a Taco Bell employee if she wanted to have a sleepover. All pretty innocuous internet-fame fodder, though, right? Women being nice to each other? #Win! Fast food content!? #TacoBellPartnerWin! But a #BigFail lurked beneath the surface. #Racism.

Chugging right along the well-trodden path of internet virality, Blake’s old tweets, in which she used the N-word and disparaged Black people’s behavior, were soon discovered (she quickly deleted them). This discovery got the mid-sized reaction you’d imagine a non-famous white woman farmer from Florida being lazily racist deserves: outrage in certain corners of the internet that weren’t big enough to circle back to Fallon or the Post. Just as that cycle of indignation was dying down to make way for America’s next unlikely animal superstar, disease struck South Florida.  

On October 15th, Blake announced the farm had experienced a “massive tragedy” and lost 99 percent of their birds to Avian influenza. When AI hits a farm, the state comes in Contagion-style to “take care of” them, aka make them fly their final flight. Devastating. Emmanuel fans rightly demanded to know his status, his whereabouts—had the flu struck him, too?!? It sure seemed like it. He was “down,” according to Blake. Emmanuel had fatigue, wasn’t eating, and had a twisted neck. She proceeded to post approximately 500 photos of her cuddling, kissing, and holding the (excuse me) absolutely fucked-up-sickly looking Emu.

Cue an incidental shift in 40 percent of Twitter suddenly becoming bird disease experts. “Don’t kiss the emu that is dying from a plague,” was the general consensus. Actual bird disease expert and virologist, Dr. Angela Rasmussen, expressed how dangerous it is to be in physical contact with a bird with AI. “It sounds harsh but to prevent it’s [sic] spread, birds that get avian flu should be euthanized,” she tweeted. I, too, agreed it was time to say goodbye to Emmanuel for the sake of saving humanity, like he was Bruce Willis in Armageddon. Racist sleepover enthusiast Blake did not.

“Something in my gut just told me that this wasn’t the end for him,” she tweeted. And it turns out that feeling in her gut was not her body fighting off AI: She was right. Emmanuel was tested for all types of sicknesses, and nothing was found to be wrong with him. But why, then, did he look like he’d glided down the current of the River Styx? Why did his feathers fall out and his neck get all twisted?

Oh, he was just havin’ a bad day! “We believe this all stemmed from stress,” Blake tweeted. “Emus are highly susceptible to stress.” Was it all of his friends being killed by the government that did it? Maybe. Was it the quick ascent to fame? Perhaps. Did having a stage mom of a farm owner with a racist past cause him distress? Who’s to say? But Emmanuel Todd Lopez was fucking stressed out and on the brink of death. Been there, my man.

Is there a lesson to the 800+ words I just typed out? Well, it feels safe to say: no. Except, just don’t be racist. And also, don’t cuddle a sick bird in your bed. Or if you do, don’t post about it, because the Internet has congealed into a single Avian virologist and will have the state remove YOU if you get too close to a sick bird. My final wish is that Emmanuel recovers and that we figure out why he, against all of his bird brothers and sisters, survived annihilation.



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Reds Release Shogo Akiyama; Expected To Select Drury, Garcia, Farmer

The Reds announced this afternoon they’ve released outfielder Shogo Akiyama. It had seemed likely Akiyama would be released when the club informed him over the weekend he wouldn’t break camp on the active roster, as his contract afforded him the right to refuse any minor league assignments.

The move closes the book on a disappointing tenure in Cincinnati. Akiyama signed a three-year, $21MM deal over the 2019-20 offseason. Making the jump from Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball to MLB during the 2020 season was no doubt difficult, as the typical challenges of the new environment were exacerbated by the shortened schedule and pandemic protocols. Nevertheless, the Reds certainly expected better than the .224/.320/.274 line Akiyama posted in 366 plate appearances over the past two years.

Due $8MM in 2022 under the terms of that contract, Akiyama is a lock to clear release waivers. Cincinnati will remain on the hook for that money, minus the league minimum salary if the 33-year-old catches on with another MLB team as a free agent. From the Reds perspective, the release was about reallocating Akiyama’s spot on the active and 40-man rosters.

The Reds don’t have to officially make a call on their Opening Day roster until Thursday, but C. Trent Rosecrans of the Athletic tweets the club is planning to select three non-roster invitees to the big league club. Infielder/outfielder Brandon Drury, catcher Aramís García and reliever Buck Farmer are all expected to break camp.

It would be the eighth consecutive season with some MLB time for Drury. The right-handed hitting utilityman had a couple decent seasons early in his career with the Diamondbacks but has only eclipsed 90 plate appearances once in the past four years. His last extended run in the majors — 120 games with the 2019 Blue Jays — resulted in only a .218/.262/.380 slash, but Drury was alright in a bench capacity with the Mets last year.

García is expected to join the big league club as the backup to Tyler Stephenson. The 29-year-old backstop has suited up with the Giants and A’s in recent years. Over parts of three big league seasons, he’s a .218/.256/.373 hitter. García owns a more impressive .268/.333/.448 line at Triple-A. He seemingly beat out fellow non-roster invitee Andrew Knapp for the backup catching job. Rosecrans tweets that Knapp has been granted his release after being informed he wouldn’t break camp.

Farmer, meanwhile, has pitched in parts of eight big league seasons. He’d spent his entire career with the Tigers but is now in line for his second MLB team. The right-hander posted a sub-4.00 ERA in both 2019-20, but he’s coming off a difficult 2021 campaign. In 35 1/3 innings, Farmer posted a 6.37 ERA with an elevated 12.3% walk rate. He’ll add some multi-inning relief depth for skipper David Bell, though, in hopes of rediscovering his 2019-20 form.

Akiyama’s release clears one spot on the 40-man roster, and the other two seem likely to come from injured list placements. Righty Justin Dunn is out “months” with a shoulder issue and figures to wind up on the 60-day injured list. Bell told reporters (including Charlie Goldsmith of the Cincinnati Enquirer) that infielder Max Schrock will be placed on the 60-day IL as well. The 27-year-old is dealing with a left calf strain.

That’ll set the stage for the Opening Day roster, but the Reds figure to require another 40-man roster spot by the middle of next week. As Jesse Borek of MLB.com writes, Cincinnati is expected to promote top pitching prospect Nick Lodolo to make his major league debut when the team first needs a fifth starter on April 13. The team has yet to make a formal announcement, but Lodolo isn’t expected to be assigned to a minor league affiliate. Assuming that plan comes to fruition, the Reds would have to formally select the southpaw onto the major league roster.



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Dale Earnhardt Jr., Red Farmer, Mike Stefanik inducted into NASCAR Hall of Fame

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Dale Earnhardt Jr., one of the most popular race car drivers in history, was inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Friday night, joining his late father.

Late-model driver Red Farmer and modified driver Mike Stefanik were also inducted into the Hall of Fame’s 12th class. Ralph Seagraves was named as the recipient of the Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR. The group was selected in 2020, but the induction ceremony was postponed more than a year due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Earnhardt received 76% of the Modern Era ballot votes, while Stefanik got 49%.

Known around the pits simply as “Junior,” the younger Earnhardt won 26 races during his Cup career, including two Daytona 500s and the 2001 Pepsi 400, which came four months after his father’s death at the same track.

Unlike his father, who won seven Cup Series titles, the younger Earnhardt never won a championship. But his impact has been felt throughout the NASCAR community.

“To join Dad in the Hall of Fame is probably as good as it is ever going to get,” Earnhardt said.

A third-generation NASCAR champion in a family synonymous with the sport, Earnhardt was named NASCAR’s most popular driver 15 straight years.

“In the time I have been involved in racing, nobody has impacted the sport more than Dale Earnhardt Jr.,” Hall of Fame driver Jeff Gordon said. “When he won, three-quarters of the grandstand stood up and cheered.”

Earnhardt began his career at family-owned Dale Earnhardt Inc., winning back-to-back Xfinity Series titles and 13 races in two full-time seasons. He won his first Cup Series race in his 12th career start. Like his father, Earnhardt was a master of the draft and thrived in restrictor-plate racing with 10 of his 26 career Cup victories coming at Daytona and Talladega, including Daytona 500 wins in 2004 and 2014.

He left DEI six years after his father’s death and joined Hendrick Motorsports in 2008 as one of the most coveted free agents in the sport.

Car owner Rick Hendrick said he’s been amazed by Earnhardt ever since.

During the recession, Earnhardt approached Hendrick and asked for $1 million to be deducted from his paycheck and distributed among the company’s employees so that “no one would have to suffer.”

When that money wasn’t redistributed right away, Earnhardt marched into the front office at Hendrick Motorsports and insisted upon it.

“He has an unbelievable heart,” Hendrick said.

“I don’t know of anybody in any sport that has represented his family any better,” Hall of Fame driver Richard Petty said.

Earnhardt was inducted by his wife, Amy.

“He gives of himself daily and loves his family dearly,” she said.

Farmer was inducted by Hall of Famer Tony Stewart.

Farmer’s exact win total during his career is unknown, but it is “somewhere north of 700,” according to the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

A member of the “Alabama Gang,” Farmer won NASCAR’s Modified Division championship in 1956 followed by three consecutive championships in the Late Model Sportsman Division from 1969-71. Farmer preferred racing late models, but did run 36 Cup Series races with a best finish being a fourth place.

In 1998, Farmer’s was named to NASCAR’s list of its 50 greatest drivers.

Farmer has lived a charmed life — surviving a helicopter crash that killed race car driver Davey Allison, a tornado that struck and damaged his car and trailer and a bout with COVID-19.

Through it all, he continues to drive on short tracks at age 89.

“It’s something that gets in your blood and you can’t get it out,” said Farmer, who said he can’t wait to drive on Talladega’s short track just days after having a treatment on his heart. “I haven’t gotten it out of my blood in 75 years. … I have had a great life and I wouldn’t trade anything for it.”

Farmer is the first driver to be inducted in on the “pioneer” ballot, which recognizes drivers whose careers began prior to 1962.

Stefanik, who died in a plane crash in 2019, won nine all-time NASCAR championships — tied with Richie Evans for the most ever.

He won seven titles in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour and two others in the Busch North Series. Stefanik holds modified series records for championships, wins, poles, and top-five and top-10 finishes. In 2003, he was named one of the tour’s 10 greatest drivers.

Former car owner and crew chief Ray Evernham, a member of the 2018 Hall of Fame class, inducted Stefanik into the Hall. Stefanik’s wife, Julie, accepted the honor on behalf of her husband and said he always respected his competitors.

“He was very methodical about his approach and he was a clean and fair racer,” she said.

Seagraves, who died in 1998, was selected as the recipient of the Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR. A former official with R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Seagraves helped sponsor the Winston Cup Series, a partnership that helped NASCAR launch into the national spotlight and created a bedrock of stability for three decades.

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Ghislaine Maxwell trial – live: Annie Farmer says at 16 socialite massaged her breasts and Epstein groped her

Ghislaine Maxwell Trial: Day 7

The trial of Ghislaine Maxwell has resumed a day after being adjourned due to an attorney falling ill.

Ms Maxwell is accused of grooming teenage girls for her convicted sex offender partner Jeffrey Epstein from the 1990s onwards. She has pleaded not guilty to all charges. Her defence team said that she is being made the “scapegoat” for Epstein’s deeds.

However, her accusers have testified that she was instrumental in the late financier’s crimes and even participated.

Annie Farmer, the fourth accuser from the indictment against Ms Maxwell, is now testifying. She is the only victim using her real name and has described in detail being groped by Epstein, instructed to rub his feet by Ms Maxwell, and massaged naked by the disgraced socialite.

Meanwhile, Ghislaine Maxwell’s brother Kevin Maxwell has alleged that his sister is being abused in prison and was only fed a packet of crisps during one day in court.

The prosecution reiterated on Wednesday that they intend to rest their case this week, wrapping up arguments from their side in a trial that was expected to last five to six weeks.

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Cross-examination ebgins

Maxwell defence lawyer Laura Menninger begins cross-examination of Ms Farmer by asking if her sister arranged her travel to New York in early 1996.

She says yes and confirms that it was not abnormal for her to fly alone, though she usually had her younger sister with her when they would fly to see their father.

Ms Farmer also confirms that Ms Maxwell had no role in her travel to New York and again says that Epstein purchased her plane ticket.

Oliver O’Connell10 December 2021 16:12

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Ms Farmer confirms that she told the FBI about Ms Maxwell massaging her.

In 2019 she spoke with law enforcement in New York and in the fall of 2019 she sued Epstein and Ms Maxwell.

Asked why she kept the cowboy boots and wanted to “reclaim” them by wearing them again, she said: “It was a dark memory and I had felt so taken advantage of by them both.”

She says she struggled to step forward as it was a “shameful” memory but she wanted “accountability” and “these people to being stopped”.

She adds that she spoke to the media off the record in 2016 and on the record in 2019 and was not paid for interviews. Ms Farmer later said that she has no financial interest in the outcome of the trial.

Ms Farmer has participated in the Epstein victim compensation fund and was awarded $1.5m.

Oliver O’Connell10 December 2021 16:07

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Ms Farmer says that after the trip to New Mexico she put the cowboy boots in the back of her closet.

Later that year she went on a cultural immersion trip to Thailand and Vietnam and testifies that it was paid for by Epstein.

She says she had no more contact with Epstein and Ms Maxwell, adding that she first told her mother about what happened in the late summer of 1996.

“I told my mom I was not raped and I didn’t want to talk about it.”

She also told a boyfriend, and then began speaking to the media in 2002, and law enforcement in 2006/7 when she spoke to the FBI.

Oliver O’Connell10 December 2021 15:57

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Ms Farmer is asked if Ms Maxwell ever gave her a massage and replies that yes, she did, adding that there was a table set up in the room in which she was staying.

Ms Maxwell instructed her to undress and she was massaged wearing nothing.

Instructed to roll onto her back, she said Ms Maxwell “pulled the sheet down”, “exposed her breasts”, and touched them.

She recalled having the sense that Epstein might be watching as the door to the room was open.

In the morning, Epstein came into her room and said he wanted to cuddle. He climbed into bed with her.

She did not like it and went into the bathroom and shut the door and waited.

Asked if she wrote about the incident in her journal, she said no as she did not want to think about it.

Oliver O’Connell10 December 2021 15:48

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Ms Maxwell took her shopping and bought her cowboy boots that cost more than $100, says Ms Farmer, adding she was grateful.

She went to the movies with Epstein and Ms Maxwell to see Primal Fear. Ms Farmer said she did not want to go given what had happened in New York, but adds that she thought it would be different this time given the presence of Ms Maxwell.

“He right away tried to hold my hand and caress and hold my foot and my arm,” she testified, adding he touched her for most of the movie and did not hide that he was doing it.

Back at the ranch, Ms Maxwell sat and held one of Epstein’s feet and instructed her to massage the other.

“I just watched what she was doing and she instructed me.”

“And so I did what she told me.”

“I felt very uncomfortable,” she says of the massage.

“I wanted to stop, and I was hoping it’d be over quickly.”

Oliver O’Connell10 December 2021 15:39

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Ms Farmer says she next saw Epstein in the spring of 1996. She flew on a commercial airline to New Mexico in April of that year.

A driver met her at the airport, holding a sign with her name on it. She was driven to Epstein’s Zorro Ranch.

It was here that she met Ms Maxwell for the first time. Ms Farmer said her presence made her feel comfortable after what has happened in the movie theatre and that she had been told Ms Maxwell would be there by her mother.

She described Ms Maxwell as slim and attractive in her 30s with a British accent.

On the defendant’s relationship with Epstein, she says she believed they were “romantic partners” and appeared “intimate” with each other.

Oliver O’Connell10 December 2021 15:31

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Ms Farmer says she would sometimes write in a journal but was not consistent.

She did write about the trip and described seeing The Phantom of the Opera as a highlight — “I bawled. It was fanstastic” — and having champagne with Epstein.

Reading from the journal to the court she described the trip to the movies.

“It was a little weird. One of those things that was hard to explain.”

She wrote: “Then he sort of caressed, rubbed my arm, shoe and foot.”

The journal entry stated that it “weirded me out” that Epstein let go of her hand when he spoke to her sister, Maria.

Ms Farmer also wrote about not wanting to bring it up: “She worships him [Epstein] and it would just create problems.”

She wrote that she knew it sounded like she was “trying to justify him doing something weird, but it isn’t.”

Reflecting on what she had written in her journal, Ms Farmer told the court: “I was trying to come up with excuses or justification to make it try to feel okay.”

Oliver O’Connell10 December 2021 15:20

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During the trip Epstein took her to see Phantom of the Opera and a movie at which he sat between her and her sister.

He “caressed” her hand and then rubbed her leg.

“I felt sick to my stomach. It wasn’t something that I was at all expecting.”

She adds that when Maria looked over he would stop, then begin again when she turned away.

Asked if she told her sister she says she did not and was confused. She described her sister as protective and knew she would be upset and worried she might lose her job, so decided not to say anything.

Oliver O’Connell10 December 2021 15:13

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Ms Farmer testifies that she met Epstein at his “very grand home” during the trip, and was staying with her sister at her apartment.

The financier asked her about her plans and suggested she apply for the University of California at Los Angeles saying he had connections.

He also suggested she go on an international trip to boost her application prospects.

Ms Farmer said she was excited to meet him and he was very friendly and seemed “down to earth” and “very nice”. She was excited by the prospect that he could help her.

Oliver O’Connell10 December 2021 15:08

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Ms Farmer is asked about her background, saying that she was born in Missouri and tells the court that growing up “money was tight” and that “it had often been a stressor since my parents were divorced”. She worried about how college would be paid for.

She talks about her siblings, including older sister Maria Farmer who is nine years older and was working in New York City with Epstein.

Ms Farmer says that when she was 16, Epstein bought her a ticket to New York. She was excited to see her sister and she met the late financier twice during the trip – but not Ms Maxwell. A photo of her at the time is entered into evidence.

Oliver O’Connell10 December 2021 15:04

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Trump went all-out to win farmer support. Now they’re all in on Biden’s infrastructure plan

The bill could be a big bipartisan win. It was drafted by lawmakers from both parties and passed the Senate with 19 Republican votes in August, but its fate remains uncertain with Democrats divided over tying it to a larger $3.5 trillion spending package.

“We’ll take as much money the federal government can send our way and I would say almost every state is in a similar condition,” said Bill Panos, the director of the North Dakota Department of Transportation, who also serves as the president of the Western Association of State Highway Transportation Officials.

Panos has a 10-year plan for North Dakota that is projected to cost $2 billion just to maintain existing infrastructure — about the amount in federal funding the state expects to receive for road and highway investments if the bill passes. North Dakota’s senators Kevin Cramer and John Hoeven, both Republicans, voted for the bill.

“These are the kinds of projects that bring food from the farm to your grocery store,” Panos added.

Iowa farmer Dave Walton is a prime example of where the problems are. During the fall harvest, he drives his soybeans east to a terminal on the Mississippi River, where a barge will eventually deliver them down to the Gulf of Mexico. But that first leg of the trip takes Walton a lot more time than it used to.

“We have to detour in several places now because the bridges are in disrepair and the weight limit has lowered,” Walton said, adding, “It can be miles and miles out of the way.”

Poor infrastructure is causing delays and costing farmers money across the country. Roads are getting worse as farm equipment is getting bigger. The problem is made even worse by extreme weather events and the stresses the pandemic has put on the supply chain, leading to shortages of everything from McDonald’s milkshakes to used cars.

Waiting on Congress

Progressive Democrats don’t want to vote for the widely popular infrastructure bill without also voting to pass an even bigger $3.5 trillion spending bill that would remake a lot of the country’s social safety net system — and also likely raise taxes on the wealthy and corporations.

As currently written, the infrastructure legislation would invest $110 billion in roads and bridges, $39 billion in public transportation, $66 in passenger rail, $17 billion in port infrastructure and $25 billion in airports — among several other things. The bigger spending bill focuses more on Biden’s social policies, including an expansion of the child tax credit, a paid leave benefit, universal pre-K and free community college.

And one proposal that angered farmers has been dropped from the House version of the bill following criticism from many farm trade groups. It would have taxed unrealized capital gains to help pay for the bill, affecting those who want to pass down their farm to the next generation — though the White House said it would exclude family farmers.

Johnathan Hladik, the policy director at the Center for Rural Affairs, argues that Congress should fix the basic, traditional infrastructure before tackling other issues.

“First things first, let’s just fix the basic problems. We have to travel long distances here just to live our daily lives,” Hladik said.

Waterway delays cost $44 million a year

The Mississippi River provides a cost-efficient and environment-friendly way to move and export farm produce and manufactured goods — but many of the locks are older than the 50 years they were designed to last. While improvements have been made recently, delays still cost $44 million a year, according to the US Department of Agriculture.

A lock closure could cause a major problem, backing up barges with no other way to go until it’s fixed.

“The locks are showing their age. The real big worry is having a failure at one of these sites during harvest season,” said Mike Steenhoek, the executive director of the Soy Transportation Coalition.

The infrastructure bill would provide the much needed funding to improve the inland waterway system, as well as to expand the nation’s broadband system — a potential boon for people living in rural America. There’s hope that improving infrastructure can revive rural communities, which have been losing population over time.

“In order to retain population and grow you’re going to need infrastructure,” said former North Dakota Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, a Democrat, who currently serves as director of agriculture for the tax consulting firm alliantgroup. “You’re not gonna live somewhere you can’t stream Netflix.”

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India clamps down on free speech to fight farmer protests

NEW DELHI (AP) — When Vinod K. Jose, executive editor of The Caravan, India’s leading investigating magazine, logged onto Twitter on Monday, he was shocked to find the magazine’s account blocked.

Jose was already dealing with a case of sedition and other charges against him, the magazine owners and a freelance journalist. At the heart of the allegations is the magazine’s coverage of the ongoing farmers’ protests that have gripped India for more than two months.

As the farmers camp out at the edges of the capital, protesting new agricultural laws they say will devastate their earnings, the mainstream and social media have come under unprecedented attacks from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party. Critics say it has used the massive demonstrations to escalate a crackdown on free speech, detaining journalists and freezing Twitter accounts.

“It’s a very chilling development for the press,” said Apar Gupta, executive director of the Internet Freedom Foundation, a digital rights advocacy group.

Jose shared a screenshot of the blocked account from his personal handle. Soon outrage ensued. Activists, journalists and media watchdogs rushed to condemn Twitter, which said it had acted upon a “valid legal request” issued by an Indian authority.

Hundreds of Indian Twitter accounts, including those of news websites, activists and a farmers’ union, were suspended on Monday. Some, including The Caravan’s, have since been restored.

Offline, at least nine journalists have been charged in the last few weeks for covering the protests.

The trigger for the clampdown was the death of a protester, Navneet Singh, when the largely peaceful rallies turned violent on Jan. 26 after a group of farmers veered from an agreed protest route and stormed New Delhi’s 17th century Red Fort. Hundreds of police and farmers were injured in clashes.

Farmer leaders condemned the violence but refused to call off the protest.

Authorities say no shots were fired and that Singh died because his tractor overturned. His family alleged he was fatally shot. Their account has been published by several outlets, including The Caravan.

Ministers in Modi’s government accused the journalists and a prominent opposition parliamentarian of inciting hatred and endangering the nation’s integrity through inaccurate reporting and tweets. It led to the filing of colonial-era sedition charges, which carry a maximum five-year prison term.

The law, like its equivalent in other former British colonies, is viewed as draconian and was revoked in the United Kingdom in 2010.

Prosecutions on sedition charges are rare but their use to silence journalists, critics and dissenters in India isn’t new and previous governments had resorted to it. But official data shows that Modi’s government has used the law more than any other — up by nearly 30%. It has also repeatedly rejected demands to repeal it.

Calls and messages seeking comment from four BJP spokespersons went unanswered. Calls to the party’s media office also were unsuccessful.

Media watchdogs and rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, condemned the government’s actions as censorship. The Editors Guild of India said the cases against journalists were “an attempt to intimidate, harass, browbeat, and stifle the media.”

Daniel Bastard, the head of Reporters Without Borders’ Asia-Pacific desk, said the government was trying to impose its own narrative.

Critics say India under Modi is growing intolerant. Its ranking on the World Press Freedom Index has fallen every year, and it ranked 142nd out of 180 places in 2020.

Reporters Without Borders noted “police violence against journalists” and increased “pressure on the media to toe the Hindu nationalist government’s line” as a major reason for the demotion.

But similarly, Twitter’s reaction of suspending accounts has also “set a terrible precedent” for free speech and press, said Jose.

“We like Twitter to stand neutral as opposed to being vulnerable to the pressures of power,” he said.

India’s Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology in its notice to Twitter on Monday said that it directed the company to take down accounts that had used incendiary hashtags during the Jan. 26 violence. But Jose said The Caravan never used such hashtags and that Twitter did not notify the magazine before suspending its account.

The ministry did not respond to calls and emails but issued another statement Wednesday, accusing Twitter of “unilaterally” restoring the accounts “despite orders to withhold them.”

It said the platform had to adhere to the authorities’ directions and may face criminal charges “for not complying with government orders.”

Twitter declined to comment.

Gupta from Internet Freedom Foundation said the IT law the government invoked to freeze the Twitter accounts gives it the power to direct online intermediaries and internet service providers to block certain content without providing any explanation.

“In the past, governments have blocked individual journalistic accounts, but the blocking of an account of an entire publication is a level of escalation,” said Gupta.

The government’s response to the farmer protests has gone beyond India’s borders.

On Wednesday, India’s Ministry of External Affairs condemned “vested interest groups trying to enforce their agenda” after pop star Rihanna and teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg tweeted in support of the protests.

Entertainers in India haven’t been spared either.

On Jan. 1, Muslim comedian Munawar Faruqui was arrested for allegedly insulting Hindu sentiments while performing in Indore, a city in Madhya Pradesh state that’s ruled by Modi’s party.

In India, intentionally hurting religious sentiments is a criminal offense. But Faruqui was arrested preemptively before his performance even began.

“Before he could even make the joke, before he could even really start the show, police came and dragged him away,” said Anshuman Shrivastava, Faruqui’s lawyer.

The show was canceled and police have since admitted they have no evidence against the comic. He was granted temporary bail by the Supreme Court on Friday, after three lower courts refused to do so.

The Associated Press reached out to five prominent comedians who didn’t want to speak on record but said they were increasingly scared of making jokes against the government and Hindu religion.

“What we are witnessing right now is a blatant violation of free speech in India, which the government has legitimized in full public view,” said Sanjay Rajoura, a prominent Indian satirist. “The government first came after Muslims because they are an easily visible minority. But now it is coming after anyone who has an informed, intelligent expression.”

The ire of Hindu nationalist groups aligned with Modi’s party has also caught streaming platforms off guard. Many of their shows have faced boycott calls and legal cases. Recently, the Supreme Court issued a notice to Amazon Prime over its show “Mirzapur” after a petition claimed it hurt cultural sentiments.

Such incidents haven’t inspired much faith in the courts, said The Caravan’s Jose. He and the owners are still battling criminal charges.

“I hope the courts see that the world is watching how the largest democracy’s judiciary defends personal liberties,” Jose said.

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