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China rules the EV market. What does the US need to do to catch up?

Although China has lapped the U.S. in shifting to electric vehicles, experts say the race is just getting started. Here's what America must do to get up speed
Lue koko artikkeli aiheesta: cbsnews.com
Submit a question for Jennifer Rubin about her columns, politics, policy and more
Submit your questions for Jennifer Rubin’s mail bag newsletter and live chat.
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washingtonpost.com
L.A. Kickers players will finally get their long-deserved U.S. Open Cup tribute
The Los Angeles Kickers won multiple U.S. Open Cup titles in the 1950s and '60s. Players on those teams will be honored before Wednesday's final.
latimes.com
Inside the Orioles’ second-half struggles with chance for AL East title all but gone
The young and talented Orioles have fallen from neck-and-neck AL East contenders alongside the Yankees to also-rans with a second-half mini-collapse.
nypost.com
Buying a home? Here’s what to watch out for with the new contracts.
New rules on real-estate agent commissions require buyers to read the fine print carefully.
washingtonpost.com
Israeli strikes kill 558 in Lebanon’s deadliest day of conflict since 2006 amid fears of all-out war
Israel says it has killed over 17,000 terrorists, without providing evidence.
nypost.com
Mikaela Mayer out for vengeance after ‘snakey’ trainer betrayed her for opponent
She called the switch a “blessing in disguise.” 
nypost.com
Killer mom Susan Smith will argue she should be paroled because she’s been (mostly) well behaved: ‘Just let me live my life’
Susan Smith, in prison for the cold-blooded 1994 murders of her two young sons, has a parole hearing in just six weeks including that she's been (mostly) well behaved in prison.
nypost.com
10-year-old girl who got lost in woods while sleepwalking found safe by thermal-imaging drone: ‘Truly a miracle’
"It's truly a miracle that she was unharmed," Webster Parish Sheriff Jason Parker said.
nypost.com
Former FTX executive Caroline Ellison faces sentencing
Ellison, 29, pleaded guilty nearly two years ago and testified against Bankman-Fried for nearly three days at a trial last November.
nypost.com
Israel’s Strikes on Lebanon
We explore what led to the strikes, what’s happening now and what might come next.
nytimes.com
Hezbollah may have pushed Israel into a new war
As Israel launches a series of deadly strikes on Lebanon, Iran's most powerful proxy may be facing a real war.
nypost.com
Under a Texas sun, agrivoltaics offer farmers a new way to make money
The solar industry built expansive farms by leasing farmland and allowing sheep to graze on the same land. Clean energy now powers the grid, even in Texas.
washingtonpost.com
What the Yankees showed in the stretch run — and why it might not matter
When it comes to the playoffs, I am not sure what to make of how the season ends.
nypost.com
Everyone knows plastic pollution is bad. Why is it so hard for the world to act?
Plastic pollution has been growing exponentially, endangering the planet and human health. The UN is working on a treaty to reduce it. | M. Dylan/Europa Press via Getty Images Microplastics are everywhere: In our pantries and refrigerators, in our oceans, in the headlines. The world produces hundreds of millions of tons of plastic each year, much of which will eventually end up in landfills or the environment. It seems a month doesn’t go by without a new study affirming one of two things (or both): The tiny particles in the plastics we use every day have made their way into everything from our brains to men’s testicles. They could be contributing to the rise in cancer rates among young people that has befuddled scientists, and they may contribute to a higher risk of heart attack and stroke. The negative effects of plastic on the environment and on the health of life on Earth should worry everyone. At the same time, modern life depends on plastics, which are vital for everything from sterile single-use medical equipment to the modern transportation of goods around the globe. Durable and malleable, there are no real substitutes for plastics. So is there anything we can do about their ubiquity now? The world’s governments have agreed to give it a try. For the past couple years, the United Nations has been negotiating a plastics treaty — a binding agreement that could set firm limits on plastic production, establish commitments to reducing plastic pollution, and encourage new investments to improve our ability to recycle plastics.  The goal, in theory, is to reach an agreement by the end of the year. But there have been four negotiating sessions so far, with no final language yet agreed upon, and the last session is supposed to be held in late November, so there’s a real possibility that a deal won’t be reached. (If world leaders can’t even agree on a pandemic treaty in the immediate aftermath of a world-altering public health crisis, as the World Health Assembly failed to do this year, it would be unsurprising for them end up at an impasse over a slow-moving crisis like plastics pollution.) Scientists and advocacy groups fear that any final agreement could be a watered-down one, that objections from powerful industries will convince government leaders from wealthier countries to duck the commitments needed to reverse the plastic pollution crisis. The next few months will be pivotal as the world’s nations seek a consensus. “I am cautiously optimistic that we can come out of this with the treaty that will be meaningful and for me, that starts with reducing plastic production,” John Hocevar, director of Greenpeace’s oceans program, told me. “If we don’t start making less plastic, then we’re not going to make a dent.” The plastics crisis, explained Plastics are made of polymers, extremely long repetitive molecules that are naturally occurring in things like animal horns and rubber trees. Humanity has been making use of these materials for millennia. But the modern era of plastics began a little more than a century ago, when Leo Baekeland, a Belgian chemist who had migrated to the US, invented the first entirely synthetic plastic in 1907. The impressive heat resistance of plastic led to its wide adoption in the electrical equipment that was becoming more common at the time. The discovery of polymers in the 1920s and the industrial acceleration of World War II rapidly expanded humanity’s capacity to manufacture plastics.  In the second half of the 20th century, a worldwide explosion of petroleum production provided the raw materials for the mass manufacturing of plastics. Manufacturers turned to consumer applications for their products, such as clear packaging for foods, clothing, and lightweight suitcases. The types of plastics, too, have grown considerably since: Our flatscreen TVs and iPhones and smart watches all depend on the latest iterations. Read more from Vox on plastic pollution Finally, a solution to plastic pollution that’s not just recycling The massive, unregulated source of plastic pollution you’ve probably never heard of More than ever, our clothes are made of plastic. Just washing them can pollute the oceans. Why 99% of ocean plastic pollution is “missing” Plastics now are no longer seen as a scientific marvel, but rather as an inextricable part of everyday life. It is cheaper to produce than other materials, leading to the proliferation of single-use plastic items, from the vital (packaging for vaccine syringes) to the frivolous (grocery bags). It’s estimated there was more plastic produced in the first decade of the 21st century than in the entirety of the 20th. In 1950, humanity produced 2 million metric tons of plastic. Today, we are churning out 430 million metric tons of plastics every year, two-thirds of which is for only short-term use and quickly ends up in a landfill. In 2009, scientists at the research group RTI International and the trade association PlasticsEurope predicted: “Any future scenario where plastics do not play an increasingly important role in human life … seems unrealistic.” Since the 1970s, some scientists and environmental advocates have warned that our plastic usage was unsustainable, harmful, and could deepen our dependence on fossil fuels. The birth of the environmental movement gave rise to concerns with plastic pollution, particularly its impacts on natural habitats, including the world’s oceans, and the dependence on petrochemicals required to produce it. You may have read about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch — an accumulation of human waste more than twice the size of Texas, 99 percent of which is plastic. Thus far, the benefits have appeared to outweigh their environmental risks to industry and policymakers.  But more recently, we’ve been learning that the reach of plastics is much more pervasive than we previously thought. The tiny molecules that make up plastics, it turns out, can flake off and find their way into almost every part of the human body. Washing our plastic-laced clothing in hot water can ultimately lead to microplastics leaking out into the ocean, into the seafood that we eat, and back into our bodies.  It’s a feedback loop with dire consequences, based on emerging evidence: Microplastics may be associated with higher risk of dementia, heart disease, infertility, and more. And we haven’t figured out how to avoid ingesting them.  One study published earlier this year found microplastic pollution in every one of the two dozen human testicles and nearly 50 dog testicles that were sampled. Another group of researchers found that the increasing prevalence of microplastics parallels the alarming recent rise in early onset cancers. We already have research suggesting that some of the compounds in microplastics could contribute to cancer development. The disproportionately low-income communities where plastics are produced may be especially at risk. Shiv Srivastava is the policy director for Fenceline Watch, a local environmental group in Houston, where a significant share of US oil is produced. He told me that because the city lacks zoning restrictions, residential developments are built next to those industrial sites. “Our communities are negatively impacted directly from the toxic multigenerational harm of plastic production,” he said. Accidents are a common occurrence at oil refineries and other industrial plants, posing an acute risk to nearby residents, and there is also evidence of elevated cancer rates that could be linked to longer-term exposure to fossil fuel production. On the other end of the plastic life cycle, plastic waste sometimes ends up being exported to the Global South, making rich countries’ trash an often hazardous problem for poor nations.  The world is working on a plastics treaty And yet, unless something changes, global plastic production is projected to triple from current levels by 2060. By 2050, greenhouse gas output associated with plastic production, use, and disposal will account for 15 percent of all the world’s emissions. When Hocevar, Greenpeace’s oceans program director, started at the organization 20 years ago, he told me, most people did not consider plastics to be a major threat to human health. “But pretty quickly, we realize that this isn’t just an ocean problem,” Hocevar said. “It’s a climate issue. It’s a human health issue. It’s an environmental justice issue.” With the emerging evidence painting an increasingly clear picture of the danger plastics present to humanity, the United Nations Environment Assembly, made up of representatives from 193 countries, in 2022 decided to negotiate a legally binding agreement to end plastic pollution. They set a deadline for themselves: the end of 2024. The questions under consideration have been clear from the start: Should plastic production be reduced? Should certain plastics be banned or phased out? What investments can be made to reduce the plastic pollution that already exists, particularly in precious natural habitats?  But the negotiators have not reached a final decision on any of the proposal treaty sections, instead continuing to deliberate over a range of options for draft language. There have been four formal negotiating conferences so far, with informal, behind-closed-doors talks in between. The final conference is scheduled for November in Busan, South Korea. The process started with great optimism, based on contemporaneous notes taken by the Plastic Pollution Coalition, one of the large nonprofit groups involved in and closely monitoring the treaty talks. Every country, from large industrialized nations like the United States to the small island nations most directly affected by plastic dumped into the oceans, agreed on the need for such an agreement. But it quickly became clear there were sharp divisions that could prevent a substantive agreement from being reached. At that first meeting in December 2022, major manufacturing countries (like China and India) and oil producers (Saudi Arabia and Iran), which supply the raw materials for plastic production, argued the treaty should require only that each nation create their own national action plans for plastic waste — not plastic production — which would include non-binding targets for reducing pollution. On the other end of the spectrum, some more progressive developed countries, led by Norway, allied with African countries, led by Rwanda, argued for a global approach that limits plastic production and bans the use of certain compounds (like PFAS, also known as “forever chemicals”). Groups like Greenpeace have been advocating for a 75 percent reduction in plastic production. The US has said it supports a goal of zero plastic pollution in the environment by 2040 — though it hasn’t yet committed to the specific plan to realize that goal. There are serious doubts over whether these two camps — known as the “high-ambition” and “low-ambition” coalitions among insiders — can find consensus before the end of the year, although everyone I spoke to expressed reserved optimism about a final deal. The US government, for its part, has tried to play dealmaker, according to people close to the process. At times the US has appeared allied with China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia. But it is also trying to keep an open dialogue with advocacy groups and the more ambitious set of nations, Margaret Spring, chief conservation and science officer at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, told me. “The United States has been playing kind of a dealmaker. They didn’t want to get trapped in a coalition,” Spring, who held senior positions at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration during the Obama presidency and has represented the International Science Council at the negotiations, told me. The question looming over the next several months: Is there really a deal to be made? The most important dividing line in the plastic treaty talks More than any other issue, specific limits on plastic production are the most contentious. Scientists and advocates argue they are necessary, that a successful treaty must address the full life cycle of plastics from birth to disposal. But, as the fight against climate change has affirmed again and again, overcoming the influence of the oil and gas industries is extremely difficult. Nearly 200 lobbyists from those industries attended the fourth negotiating conference in Ottawa this past May. They significantly outnumbered representatives from the scientific and Indigenous communities, making the argument that a treaty should focus on demand, rather than on supply, and on recycling. The problem, scientists and advocates say, is that recycling plastics is notoriously difficult and can lead to its own health hazards. This week, California sued ExxonMobil for allegedly lying about the effectiveness of plastic recycling. At the May meeting, the majority of the conference agreed to exclude “upstream” measures — i.e., those focused on supply and production — from any of the agreement draft language. While there is still an opportunity to insert such provisions into the final draft, it represented a setback for the environmental advocates. “It’s like trying to regulate tobacco and we know it causes cancer. But then you’re bringing in all these executives to create regulations on the deadly product. Essentially the same thing here,” Erica Cirino, author of Thicker Than Water: The Quest for Solutions to the Plastic Crisis, now working at the Plastic Pollution Coalition, told me. There have been some signs of the impasse thawing. In August, a group of environmental activists attended a meeting with US government officials, in which they were told that the Biden administration would support limits to plastic production; Reuters soon reported the same, citing a source close to US negotiators.  “They don’t know how they’re gonna do the supply side, but they’re willing to say that that has to happen,” Spring said. “You can’t recycle your way out of it.” But since that development in August, there has not been a more forceful public declaration of that new position from the US government — to the discouragement of some advocates. “Right now, while we applaud what this shift could potentially mean, without meaningful details, it’s only as valuable as a piece of paper it’s written on,” Srivastava told me. “Right now, there isn’t one.” Some of the people closely monitoring the treaty talks chalk up America’s caginess to its dealmaker role, avoiding a public position to keep more resistant countries at the table. The risks of failure Beyond plastics production levels, there are still plenty of other details to work out. Should certain substances be banned or phased out? Should companies be required to disclose the chemicals in their plastics? Should countries that refuse to ratify the treaty be subjected to punitive trade measures? All of those questions are supposed to be addressed during ongoing “intersessional” negotiations that are not made public, and then at the final November conference. Some of those monitoring the process say they would not be surprised if an additional conference is scheduled to hash out a final deal, which advocates say would be preferable to a weak agreement that lacks the mechanisms to expand in the future.  Others, however, worry that the final product could only be more watered down the longer negotiations go on. As both sides look for an exit strategy, the low-ambition countries could gain more leverage to insist, for example, on nixing any firm production limits on plastics. “When you have momentum, you use the momentum. Keep going,” Spring said. “I think that the danger of extending is: Does the air go out of the balloon?” Advocates are urging policymakers to seize the moment. “Every minute that we don’t have this treaty is more time where plastic pollution is accumulating,” Srivastava continued. “It is only going to increase without mandated reduction targets worldwide. So it’s super important that it happens.”
vox.com
Have economists gone out of fashion in Washington?
Once the high priests of policy, economists may now be seeing lower demand. But who's taking their place?
npr.org
Trump Withdraws Support, GOP Pulls Funding from ‘Black Nazi’ Mark Robinson
Andrew Harnik/Getty ImagesDonald Trump and the Republican Party are ditching Mark Robinson, their scandal-plagued nominee in the North Carolina governor’s race.Robinson has been battling to keep his head above water after claims that he called himself a “Black Nazi” and made other offensive comments on a pornographic website.But it appears the national GOP hierarchy are prepared to let him drown. The Republican Governors Association said in a statement that they are pulling Robinson’s financial support.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Boyfriend of Navajo woman gets life in prison for her murder
Jaime Yazzie's case became emblematic of what officials call an epidemic of missing and slain Indigenous women​.
cbsnews.com
Mar-a-Lago Caller Charged With Threatening to Kill Trump
Kevin Dietsch/Getty ImagesA man has been charged with threatening to kill Donald Trump shortly after the first attempt on the former president’s life. Prosecutors accuse 64-year-old Warren Jones Crazybull, a Sandpoint, Idaho resident, of phoning security at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, to say: “Find Trump… I am coming down to Bedminster tomorrow. I am going to down him personally and kill him,” according to court filings first reported Monday by Forbes.Though Bedminster, home to one of Trump’s golf clubs, is in fact located more than 1,200 miles away in New Jersey, Crazybull is accused of making another eight such calls to the Palm Beach resort on July 31—just two weeks after a botched assassination attempt against the Republican candidate at a rally in Butler County, Pennsylvania.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
One day, Luis García Jr. ‘just decided to swing real hard.’ It worked.
Luis García has decided to ignore the impressive statistics tied to his name, though the data tells a compelling and promising tale
washingtonpost.com
Zelenskyy discusses 'Victory Plan' he will present to Biden: GMA exclusive
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the "Victory Plan" he will present to President Joe Biden is aimed at strengthening Ukraine to force Russia to negotiate.
abcnews.go.com
Grocery chains are bigger than ever. See who runs the stores near you.
The traditional supermarket industry has shrunk as big-name grocers acquired their smaller local and regional rivals. See the companies behind stores near you.
washingtonpost.com
Caroline Ellison, key witness in Bankman-Fried trial, set for sentencing
Because of her cooperation with prosecutors, the former close associate of disgraced cryptocurrency mogul Sam Bankman-Fried may avoid prison, experts say.
washingtonpost.com
How NYC ‘sanctuary’ status allows bloodthirsty migrant gang Tren de Aragua to thrive in Big Apple’s shelters
New York City's self-imposed "sanctuary city" status protects asylum seekers -- but it also keeps cops and federal immigration officials from breaking up the violent migrant gang thriving in the shelters.
nypost.com
Israeli Strikes Kill Hundreds in Lebanon, and Biden to Address U.N.
Plus, the U.S. News college rankings are out.
nytimes.com
You Should Read Trump’s Wild Truth Social Posts
They are even worse than you think.
theatlantic.com
L.A. is a stacked sandwich city
There is no shortage of delicious sandwiches in L.A., from long-standing delis to newcomers offering Italian schiacciata, Philly cheesesteaks, tuna melts, meatball subs and more.
latimes.com
Concern grows as bird flu outbreaks continue to rise among California dairy herds
The number of dairy herds infected with H5N1 Bird Flu doubled over the weekend. The count is now 34.
latimes.com
'Brilliant Minds' and 'English Teacher' show burnout in the workplace as a constant
Television creators say themes of burnout and stress in the workplace are baked into storylines because they're omnipresent in real life.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: The misery in Springfield, Ohio, is a warning about Trump and Vance
Trump and Vance are intentionally spreading unverified and incendiary claims about migrants in Springfield, Ohio. That is a warning to the rest of America.
latimes.com
Virus that can cause paralysis in children is on the rise in California: A few safeguards
Enterovirus D68, which in rare cases can cause polio-like paralysis in children, is on the rise in California and across the nation, analyses show.
latimes.com
L.A. is sandwich heaven. 37 of our favorites to try now.
From soaked tortas ahogadas to meatball subs and a walnut shrimp katsu, these are (what we consider to be) the best sandwiches in L.A.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Anti-Trump letter writers aren't helping Kamala Harris
If the letter writers in the L.A. Times inveighing against Trump think they're helping the vice president, they need to think again.
latimes.com
How 'Frontline' filmmakers scrambled to make 'The Choice' about Harris vs. Trump
President Biden's exit upended not just the election, but "Frontline's" documentary on the candidates. The filmmakers were able to compress months of work into a few weeks.
latimes.com
Reclassifying cannabis as a Schedule III drug only exacerbates a bad situation
It may seem like progress, but reclassifying marijuana just adds another chapter to the long history of misguided and toxic drug regulation in the U.S.
latimes.com
From Hilary to Demi: Inside the 'rise and fall' of Disney Channel
Hilary Duff, Raven-Symoné, Miley Cyrus, Selena Gomez and Demi Lovato ushered in Disney Channel's growth in the 2000s. Ashley Spencer writes about its rise and fall.
latimes.com
This swing Central Valley congressional district will cross party lines for 'best' candidate
Voters in Congressional District 22 say the hard-fought race between GOP incumbent Rep. David Valadao and his challenger, Democrat Rudy Salas, will come down to the man not his party.
latimes.com
Amazon demands a lot from its drivers. Now they're pushing back
Instead of hiring delivery drivers directly, Amazon relies on a network of outside companies. Drivers are pushing back and taking steps toward unionizing.
latimes.com
Prosecutors say evidence clears him. He’s set to be executed today.
Felicia “Licia” Gayle was found stabbed to death in her suburban St. Louis home in 1998. Marcellus Williams says he didn’t kill her.
washingtonpost.com
Waiting for a flight at LAX? You might be able to read a banned book
Screens throughout the airport will soon invite people to read a banned book by using a QR code to get a temporary library card.
latimes.com
We know what Trump's 'concepts of a plan' on healthcare would be. They would be deadly
The Trump campaign is promoting a healthcare solution that was tried and shown to be a failure. It would place people with preexisting conditions at mortal risk.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Don't blame Sierra Madre's human residents for their bear problem
Black bears were important to the San Gabriel Mountains in the 1930s; now, the population isn't effectively managed. Blame the state of California.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: If only Vin Scully had been here to call Shohei Ohtani's 50-50 season
Can Shohei Ohtani get any more perfect? 'Now I'm waiting for his endorsement of Kamala Harris and Tim Walz,' says a reader.
latimes.com
Dataland, the world's first AI arts museum, will anchor the Grand complex in downtown L.A.
Artist Refik Anadol has revealed plans to open his new AI museum, Dataland, in the Grand L.A. complex near MOCA, the Broad and Walt Disney Concert Hall.
latimes.com
Fatal police shooting followed chaotic altercation among neighbors
Maryland officials are investigating a fatal shooting by a Montgomery County police officer outside a home in the Wheaton-Glenmont area.
washingtonpost.com
This magical Amtrak ride to New Mexico belongs on your winter bucket list (but book soon)
Sometimes you long for a different way of traveling, one that slows down time and lets you watch pink clouds as you roll across the desert.
latimes.com
South Carolina executes man days after witness admits to lying on stand
Freddie Owens was executed in South Carolina days after a key prosecution witness said he had lied on the stand decades earlier.
washingtonpost.com
Why the next president — whether it's Donald Trump or Kamala Harris — won't have a mandate
Presidents since Andrew Jackson have claimed special authority from the nation's voters to enact their agendas. The Constitution grants nothing of the kind.
latimes.com
He told followers he was the son of God. She helped get him arrested on sex trafficking charges
Apollo Quiboloy was arrested in the Philippines, accused of leading a global sex trafficking conspiracy, which he denies. In California, his church is also in hot water.
latimes.com