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Israel threatened to kill Iran’s highest leader. It may come next

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CNN

President Donald Trump has joined Israel’s attacks on Iran, raising questions about whether such intervention could lead to changes in Tehran’s regime.

Iran, home to the longtime separatist movement that fought for power and independence, could face internal fragmentation and chaos if its government collapses. Experts warn.

Trump reportedly rejected Israel’s plan to kill Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and said this week that Iran’s top leader was a “easy target.”

“We know exactly where the so-called ‘Super Leader’ is hiding,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social Post Tuesday. “He’s an easy target, but he’s safe there – we won’t take him out (kill him!), or at least not for now.”

In this 2006 photo, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is unfolded next to a portrait of the late founder of Ayatollah Khomeini, Iran's Islamic Republic, during a meeting in Tehran.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has also not been ruled out as Khamenei’s target, saying that the death of the supreme leader “will not escalate the conflict and will end the conflict.”

On Thursday, Israeli Defense Minister Katz went further and declared that Khamenei could not “continue to exist” after Iranian missiles struck hospitals in Israel.

Iran is a country of over 90 million people and is one of the oldest continuing civilizations in the world. That boundary has been more or less stable for about 100 years. The Islamic Republic was able to preserve these frontiers despite its diverse population of ethnic and religious groups. Many of them seek autonomy at various points.

However, comments from Israeli and US officials have prompted speculation about what Iran would look like if Khamenei was killed. Experts warn that the country could face a variety of scenarios, including the collapse of government and civil war.

The 86-year-old clergyman has ruled Iran for more than 35 years as the highest authority to rise to power 10 years after the Islamic Revolution of 1979 overthrew the US-backed monarch.

For many years he integrated power and ruled with iron grips under strict Islamic law. He crushed the waves after a wave of protest demanding freedom in society – each increasing its ferociousness – and expanded Iran’s reach far beyond its boundaries through a network of proxy militias.

His fate becomes an issue, bringing attention to who will make him succeed, and how that uncertainty unleashes greater anxiety.

The Supreme Leader was selected by a meeting of 88 members for professionals and has not been officially named as successors. It is unclear who could replace Khamenei, but the process could take place as a separatist group that has long resented the Islamic Republic.

Israel has already killed some of Iran’s major military personnel, and experts say the regime is the weakest right now.

Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy Institute in Washington, DC, said the change of administration would require Israel or the United States to have Khamenei’s successor and someone to send troops to the country.

An Iranian couple is walking through the park and displaying Iranian missiles in the background on January 20, 2024 in Tehran, Iran.

Israel is Reza Pallavi, the US-based son of an abdicated Iranian monarch who was exiled in 1979. Pahlavi expressed support for Israel’s actions, garnering praise from some of the Iranian diaspora and provoking accusations of betrayal from many others.

“Immediately in Tehran,” Israeli Minister Amichiy Chikuri, who is in the diaspora affair, posted on X on Friday, with a photo of herself shaking hands with a smiling Pallavi. Pahlavi told BBC News on Sunday that Israel’s conflict with Iran was an opportunity to overthrow the Iranian regime.

Experts say if the Supreme Leader is killed and the Guardian Council names his successor, the risk of instability could increase.

The possible outcome of the possible killing of Khamenei is the collapse of the entire administration, Parsi said.

“The collapse of the government is about bringing down the nation and causing chaos that follows,” Parsi told CNN.

If the Iranian regime collapses, there could be some scenarios, but none of them is expected to be a preference for the US or neighboring states, experts said.

Hamed Musabi, an associate professor of international relations at Tehran University, warned that military intervention “is rarely leading to democratization.”

“Look at the experiences of Iraq and Afghanistan. Both countries have been unstable for many years,” Musabi told CNN, adding that Iran is “even more complicated” than those countries.

One outcome is that other elements of the Iranian military assume power. They are unlikely to seek diplomatic routes with Israel or the United States, but they could take a hawk approach rather than viewing possession of nuclear bombs as the only deterrent to more attacks, Parsi said.

The military faction that can be taken over “is not the kind of administration the United States may have had in mind,” Parsi said.

Another possible scenario is a descent into chaos as multiple ethnic groups in Iran compete for power.

Iran has a diverse population, including Persians, Azeris, Arabs, Baroques and Kurdish people. Under Khamenei’s decades of rule, the Islamic Republic was able to contain primarily civil and ethnic unrest, despite the abuses faced by several groups.

According to Amnesty International last year, minorities face discrimination in “education, employment, proper housing and access to the Politburo.” “We have continued lack of investment in areas where ethnic minorities live, exacerbating poverty and alienation.”

According to the Minority Rights Group, Azelis accounts for around 16% of Iran’s total population. Shia groups are the largest and most integrated minority in the Islamic Republic, but still face inequality.

Arabs account for up to 4 million people and have been marginalized for many years.

People shop at the market as they prepare for the Knowles, the Persian New Year, on March 12, 2024 in Tehran, Iran.

The Baroque people, a group of Baloch-speaking tribes, make up almost five million people in Iran’s population. Mostly Sunni groups extend to neighbouring Pakistan and Afghanistan, increasing the likelihood of separatist conflicts rippling across the border.

The “Army of Justice” organization, a Baroque Sunni extremist group, has shown support for Israel’s strike against Iran, saying, “It is clear that the current attack is not in Iran, but in the Belayat-e-Faki regime.

The Kurds make up about 10% of Iran’s population, and most settle along the border between Iraq and Turkey. They are the subject of “deep-rooted discrimination,” Amnesty said.

The Kurdistan Liberal Party, an Iranian nationalist and separatist extremist group, issued a statement in support of Israel’s strike, supporting “the process of destroying Iran’s military and security capabilities.”

The Iranian Kurdish rebellion is a major concern for neighboring Iraq and Turkey, both of which have a Kurdish minority who have sought independence.

Another banished group that has gained support from conservatives in the US is Mujahadin-E Khalq (MEK), who once was a US-designated terrorist organization, but today counts prominent anti-Iranian politicians as important ally. Iran has denounced terrorism, saying it had launched a series of attacks in the 1980s. MEK denies these fees.

It is one of the most organized opposition groups facing the Islamic Republic, but has little support among the Iranians. It is mainly due to its violent past and its support for Iraqi President Saddam Hussein during almost a decade-long war with Iran.

If the Iranian regime collapses, “there will be supportive of Israelis and perhaps the US national separatist groups,” Parsi said. This will lead to a situation in which the remains of the state are consumed by combat separatists.

Fatemeh Haghighatjoo, executive director of the Non-Violence Initiative for Democracy and a former Iranian lawmaker who opposes the current regime, has expressed fear that Iran could fall into civil conflict if the current rules collapse.

“I want to remove this regime. I’m against it,” she told CNN’s Becky Anderson. “My main concern is… seeing signs of a civil war.”

Vance travels to Los Angeles to meet Marines deployed against protesters

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Los Angeles’ protests against the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement became violent earlier this month.

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Vice President JD Vance heads to Los Angeles to meet troops deployed to quell protests against Trump’s immigration enforcement measures.

Vance’s trip on June 20th is the highest level visit from Trump administration officials to the city that became the epicenter of the White House’s campaign to deport millions of immigrants from the country.

A summary issued by the Vice President’s Office on Friday said he will tour the multi-agency Federal Joint Operations Center and the Federal Mobile Command Center in Los Angeles.

Vance, a former Marine, will meet leadership and the Marines and make brief remarks. He is also expected to hold a press conference.

Protests erupted in Los Angeles in early June against an ice attack. The “No Kings” nationwide protested against Trump’s aggressive expansion on June 14 in cities across the country

A small number of protesters in Los Angeles attacked federal law enforcement and President Donald Trump responded by deploying the California State Guard despite opposition from Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The Democratic-led city is home to millions of immigrants and is a melting pot of Latino, Asian and other cultures.

According to an analysis by the Institute for Immigration Policy, approximately 4.2 million people, or one-third of Greater Los Angeles’ 13 million residents, are foreign-born, according to an analysis of U.S. Census data.

Trump, why “strange” Tucker Carlson and his friend’s breakup are so troublesome

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With friends like these, who needs enemies?

They’re taking shots of each other about a week after their public fallout with technology CEO Elon Musk, President Donald Trump, former Fox News host, right-wing Firebrand Tucker Carlson.

Carlson began his start over Trump’s handling of conflict between Iran and Israel, calling him “conspired in acts of war” in his newsletter. True socially, Trump fought back at Carlson, giving his host a derivative nickname, just like many of his past political enemies. “Someone please explain to the strange Tucker Carlson that Iran cannot have nuclear weapons,” he wrote. USA Today reached out to representatives of Trump and Carlson for further comment.

How did you get here? Well, to paraphrase the farewell expert named Taylor Swift, we did something that we had “watched this film before.”

Friendship experts previously told USA Today that such public fallouts are important to be careful. Shasta Nelson, a social relationship expert and author of “Business of Friendship: Making the Most of Our Relationships We Spend Most Times,” said it was especially easy when friends drop out in unhealthy ways, when they fall out, it was a peaceful division spiral into a toxic feud.

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“These official relationships are a mirror of what happens frequently,” Nelson said. When two former friends get caught up in an online feud, it’s because they’re trying to get the public what they ultimately need for each other.

How does a split friendship affect our mental health?

Until recently, Carlson appears to be one of Trump’s biggest fans, endorsing him in the 2024 election and gave a headline speech at New York’s Madison Square Garden Rally in the lead-up in November.

That’s part of why his recent attack on Trump sparked such a conversation online. And Trump isn’t the only one Carlson has recently fought online. His interview with Texas Senator Ted Cruz recently went viral on X, with the two clashing over our involvement in the Middle East.

Shouldn’t we underestimate the collapse of friendship? Mental health sacrifice. That’s because, as Nelson previously told USA Today, our society doesn’t have the right etiquette when it comes to our friends who say goodbye. Without a clear roadmap, friendship divisions often feel vague and sometimes lead to unnecessary wounds.

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When that scar spreads online, it tends to rise to feud levels.

“It can be easily said that the splitting of friendship can be more complicated than romantic relationships because there are romantic relationships, so we have more rituals around them, and we usually have more conversations,” Nelson said. “In our friendship and platonic relationships, it can be very complicated. We expect it to be easier. Our expectations are different, we have more sadness, and we have more anger.”

How to deal with hostile friendship breakup

Still, if a friendship breakup takes an antagonistic turn, then that hostility is taken online – there is a way to remove the situation and reconcile.

Nelson recommends that both friends place their swords and begin a respectful, private dialogue.

“The best approach is to always sit down and practice vulnerability with each other and practice responsibility for our own,” she previously told USA Today. “I’m finding a place where I can apologize, I’m finding ways to understand others. I’m trying to use language where I say, ‘Understand this.’ “

If you find that others are unacceptable to that approach, psychotherapist Stephanie Salkis recommends ignoring online slings and arrows. The reaction tends to add fuel to the fire.

“When people use social media to attack each other, that doesn’t generally work,” she previously told USA Today. “No one ever said it. ‘Well, I’m so glad you solved that problem.”

Can Trump and Carlson take this route? That’s possible. The president suggested that he and Carlson might be ready to make up, speaking to reporters at a press conference on the afternoon of June 18th, according to a transcript provided to USA Today by White House representatives.

“Tucker is a good guy,” the president said. “He thought he said he was a little too strong, so he called the other day and apologized, and I appreciated it.”

Trump’s Gulf Arab Allies to avoid all-out war in Iran

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CNN

Fearing the impact of Iran’s entire regime collapse, Gulf Arab countries strengthened their outreach to the Trump administration and Tehran last week.

Amid concerns that Iran’s instability could affect the region, top officials say the United Arab Emirates, a US ally that has long opposed Iran’s unsupervised nuclear program, has been in touch with officials in Tehran and Washington.

“We are following the situation very closely… our diplomacy works hard like many other countries,” Anwar Gargash, adviser to the UAE president, said on Friday. “Concerns need to be resolved diplomatically. There are many issues in the area (and) if you choose to tackle everything with a hammer, nothing will remain unbreakable.”

Israel launched an unprecedented attack on Iran last week, killing its top military brass and several nuclear scientists, destroying parts of its nuclear program. Iran responded with a barrage of missile attacks on Israeli cities.

Ghagash, who in March sent a letter to Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to talk about nuclear weapons, said military escalation into the conflict was “harmful” to the region as a whole.

“This is bringing us back. The language of conflict is overwhelming the new language of de-escalation and economic prosperity in the region,” Gargash said.

Across the Gulf, rising unrest over conflict has encouraged efforts to prevent further escalation.

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman spoke with Trump and called for a de-escalation after Israel struck Iran on June 13th.

“We have conducted all possible communications between all the local and overseas stakeholders. These consultations were to find a way out of the rabbit hole when it comes to this escalation,” Qatar Foreign Ministry spokesman Al Ansari said on Tuesday.

Last month, Trump was troubled by a grand welcome and trillion dollar deal when he visited three Gulf Arab countries for his first presidential visit of his second term. At the time, Trump praised the “birth of the modern Middle East” and expressed his intention to sign a contract with Iran to prevent the construction of a nuclear bomb.

US President Donald Trump will be greeted by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who arrived at the King of Khalid International Airport in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on May 13, 2025.

However, after Israel attacked and killed Iranian military leaders and nuclear scientists, Trump shifted his rhetoric and bullyed the possibility of US military intervention against Iran.

The president’s threat has made his Arab allies worried and fears Iran’s retaliation attacks against the United States in their soil where the United States has a serious military presence. The Gulf states, the major energy exporters, also fear that Iran could close the Strait of Hormuz on the south shore where a third of its coast passes.

Long-standingly critical of Iran’s nuclear ambitions and the Middle East’s proxy militias, Gulf Arab countries have in recent years eased their stances towards Tehran and mitigated them to avoid conflicts towards diplomacy and reconciliation.

Experts warn that US attacks on Iran can draw you into a muddy quagmire that is even more difficult than the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“Iran is big and can be broken and divided along ethnic lines (and that) has a substantial stockpile of missiles, UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles).

“I don’t think anyone wants to see Iran glide in chaos. I think there’s a broader desire and preference to deal with one bad actor, not multiple bad actors,” he said.

Firas Maksad, managing director of the Middle East of Eurasian Group, told CNN that Gulf Arab countries are in a comfortable position to see Iran weakening, but prefer diplomacy to avoid instability in the region.

“If there is actually a diplomatic breakthrough, if Iran’s nuclear ambitions for nuclear weapons are at least kept at the upper limit, Iran will be much weaker and more stable, which is a very positive outcome for the Gulf states,” he said.

“But I have to say that the concern is that (Israel Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu will drag the region down and perhaps drag President Trump into further escalation, robbing Iran’s ability to export oil,” he added. “It could take us in a much more negative direction in terms of blowback to Gulf (oil) facilities.”

Trump’s announcement on Thursday in the two-week diplomacy window now provides breathing space for his Gulf Arab allies to drive escalation after an unprecedented regional clash that rattles the Middle East on the edge.

What is the continuation allowance rate?

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Good morning and happy Friday! This is Betty Lin-Fisher in the consumer-centric Daily Money edition on Friday.

It’s been a while since I looked at the allowances for young adults, children. So when my colleague Rachel Barber read about his child’s benefits, I was surprised.

According to a new survey by Wells Fargo, 29% of parents increased their child allowances last year to keep up with inflation, while 65% have not reduced the amount they give to their children.

How much benefits do children get?

How to save on car loan interest

Are you in the market for new cars? When funding that new ride, you may want to consider the 20% rule.

In 2025, new cars reached record numbers.

What is the 20% rule? How will it help you pay for your car?

📰Consumer stories should not be overlooked

🍔Today’s Menu🍔

Kroger is facing a Tiktok rebound after a June cake shortage video went viral for sale at one of the grocery locations. Recorded at a store in Atlanta, Georgia, the video showed several cakes decorated to a minimum on June 19th in honor of federal public holidays.

About daily money

Every day, Daily Money will provide you with the best consumer and financial news from USA Today, breaking complex events, providing you with the TLDR version, and explaining how everything from the Fed rate to bankruptcy will affect you.

Supreme Court’s side for disabled firefighters in the case of benefits

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WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court on June 20 ruled against a retired firefighter who wanted to sue his former employer to reduce medical benefits for disabled retirees.

The court ruled that Karin Stanley cannot sue the city of Sanford, Florida under the Disability Persons Act.

The ADA upheld a lower court ruling that he did not apply to Stanley as she no longer worked in the city when she submitted the challenge.

Writing for the majority, Judge Neil Gorsuch wrote that someone who claims discrimination under the ADA must prove that she was or wanted to do the job she played when she was a suspect.

“In other words, the law protects people, not profiting from discrimination,” he wrote. “And this law tells us who those people are: qualified individuals, those who hold or seek jobs at the time of alleged discrimination of the defendant.”

If Congress wants to expand the law to protect retirees like Stanley, that can be done, he continued.

“But the decision to do so or not lie in this body, not in this body,” he wrote.

“The Essential Building Blocks of the American Dream”

In dissent, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson said retirement benefits were “an important building block of America’s dream.”

“Disabled Americans who have retired from the workforce simply want to enjoy the fruits of labor that are free from discrimination,” she wrote in her dissent, adding in part to Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s participation. “It is saddened that this court was established over 30 years ago (through elected representatives) because it has greatly reduced the rights of people with disabilities.”

Jackson said Congress could intervene “to correct any mistakes made by the court.”

The Americans with Disabilities Act was designed to protect active employees and job seekers from discrimination. It was not intended as a law extending to the employer’s relationship with former employees. Business groups and associations representing cities and counties allegedly claimed in Stanley’s allegations.

The law is intended for those who “can perform the essential functions of the employment position held or desired by such individuals, with or without reasonable accommodation.”

Stanley’s lawyers allege that she is employed and therefore covered by law – when her future profits were cut in 2003.

When Stanley became a firefighter in 1999, the city paid health insurance a premium of about $1,000 a month. Those who retire after 25 years of work or due to disability will continue to receive benefits until age 65.

Stanley found that in 2003, the profits of disabled retirees had decreased after leaving the department to 47 in 2018 due to Parkinson’s disease.

The city covered $1,000 of her $1,300 monthly health insurance premiums in just two years, and then she had to pay the entire premium herself.

Stanley sued, claiming that the city discriminated against her because of her disability, asking the city to pay her monthly premium of $1,000 until she turns 65.

The city has never been worse than non-disabled employees who have retired after working less than 25 years, despite Stanley’s profits declined.

The case is Stanley V. It’s Stanford city.

How much water to drink, etc.

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Summer 2025 has arrived. It starts with hot and says predictions get used to it.

The hot summer isn’t just uncomfortable – it’s dangerous. Heat killed more people in 2024 than floods, tornadoes, winds and hurricanes, according to a report on weather-related deaths released by the National Weather Service. The average for 30 years tells the same story.

The danger of fever comes in many ways:

It can all be quickly cascaded into life-threatening or fatal illnesses, even healthy people.

Some thermal safety tips are obvious, but some are surprising. (Do you know how much water to drink while you’re passionate? That’s probably more than you think.)

What should you know about this:

The basics of safety

  • Use sunscreen Or sunscreen: And reapply regularly (good baseline every 2 hours).
  • Heat outfit: For the National Weather Service, we choose lightweight clothing in loose, bright colors.
  • Do not leave children or pets in the car: The temperature quickly becomes fatal – even if it’s not too hot.
  • Please check the weather: Your favorite weather app needs plenty of information on UV indexes (for sunscreen purposes), heat warnings, and temperatures like touch (details of important reasons below). Heat.gov provides additional information on forecasts and thermal risks.
  • Bring water with you: If you spend a lot of time in the sun, you will need multiple bottles per person. (How many bottles are there? Read more here.)
  • Find shade and air conditioners: Keep your risks cool and avoid direct sun whenever possible.
  • Know your risks: Fever is dangerous to everyone, but some people are more vulnerable than others. Being a child puts you at greater risk by being over 65 or pregnant, says the Centers for Disease Control.

A story about our planet: Sign up for USA Today’s Climate Point Newsletter.

The humidity is not uncomfortable. What is the heat index?

When humidity is high, sweat is not very effective in cooling the body. It makes it feel hotter than that and increases the risk.

The heat index is a measure of how hot the relative humidity actually feels when factored along with actual temperature.

If the heat index reaches 105 degrees or higher, conditions can quickly become dangerous for people and pets.

a lot.

In Arizona, authorities recommend drinking about 65 ounces of water a day, even if you’re mostly indoors.

It’s even more urgent for people working outdoors in extreme heat. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration says outdoor workers should drink at least 8 ounces of water every 20 minutes, even if they are thirsty.

If you’re drinking 16 ounces of water, it’s three bottles every two hours.

Do you just drink water? I’ll know more.

Your body may need to refill electrolytes, but if you are trying to stay hydrated, be careful with sugar and caffeinated drinks.

Kelly Orino, assistant professor of surgical oncology at Yale School of Medicine, told USA Today that people can dilute bottles of Gatorade with water to replenish their bodies and replace the loss of salt from extended sweating. “In extreme heat, we’re sweating, we’re losing pure water, but we’re losing salt too,” she said.

From hot to heat strokes: know how to spot symptoms of life-threatening conditions

Excessive heat and humidity make it difficult for your body to regulate the temperature. According to the CDC, there are some signs and symptoms of fever disease here.

The National Association of Athletic Trainers says heatstrokes can be fatal soon. The association says people should be careful:

  • Changes in consciousness (“seizures, confusion, emotional instability, irrational behavior, or poor mental vision”)
  • Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
  • Headache, dizziness, weakness
  • Increased heart rate
  • Low blood pressure and fast breathing
  • dehydration
  • Combat

People with a temperature of about 104 degrees are in a life-threatening situation. Immediate treatment is required. An incredibly effective treatment: an ice-filled bathtub.

Contributor: Cybele Mayes-Osterman, USA Today; Rafael Romero Lewis, Republic of Arizona; Cheryl McCloud, Pensacola News Journal

Instead of worrying about your weight, focus on avoiding vulnerability

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Editor’s Note: Shift Your Mindset is a series from CNN’s life from time to time, but a better team. We talk to experts about how to do things differently to lead a better life.

The anti-aging aspiration has transformed longevity products and services into gold mines of the health industry. But who would like to add years just to spend so they struggle to move, relying on others and not being able to enjoy basic activities?

If you can’t actually live your life, what is the point of sticking to you for so long? Building and maintaining strength and mobility will help you maintain the independence you need to age with dignity. And what you do now makes all the difference.

Their new book, “The Complete Bone and Joint Health Plan: Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Help Trement and Treat and Treming,” nutritionist and personal trainer Sydney Nitzkorski, orthopedic surgeon and sports medicine expert Dr. Jocelyn Wittstein now shares the strategic diet and exercise choices you can make to help you maintain the quality of your life. Nitkolsky is a sports nutritionist at Marist University in Poughkeepsie, New York, where she practices private fitness and nutrition. Wittstein is an associate professor at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina.

This conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.

CNN: What is the biggest misconception about bone and joint health?

Dr. Jocelyn Wittstein: Most people don’t notice that their bone density (BMD) peaks around the age of 30. After that, your goal is to maintain BMD and slow down bone loss. In women, bone density decreases by about 1% per year until menopause, then accelerates to 2% per year. Men experience a decline of about 1% per year. The key is to build a strong foundation early and continue to support bone and joint health throughout your life.

Another misconception is that cardiovascular exercise alone is enough to maintain mobility, but strength training and light impact exercises are also important. These activities can increase peak bone density in people in their teens and 20s, but those over the age of 30 need the same exercise to minimize losses.

This is important considering that one in four adults has osteoarthritis and some people get older. Age 50 is at increased risk for both arthritis and osteoporosis. Especially women. 77% of postmenopausal women reported joint pain in a randomized study.

Sydney Nitzkolsky: As a nutritionist, I discover that people don’t think enough about how much calcium they are taking in, and most people don’t get enough. Your body is unable to produce the calcium it needs, not just for bones and teeth, but also for the heart, muscles and nerve function. If you’re not consuming enough, your body will raid the reserves of your skeleton to meet that requirement.

This is why everyone at any age needs to get enough calcium. Because if you have kids, it’s when they’re increasing their bone mass. But even if you’re over 60 years old, sufficient calcium is still important. Enhancing bone health is extremely important at all ages and it is never too late to take positive steps.

CNN: Do I need a calcium supplement?

Nitzkolsky: Whole Foods is the best source of calcium, and the supplement is a secondary option. It is recommended to track your typical weekly intake and adjust accordingly. Adults need 1,000-1,200 milligrams of calcium daily. Excellent sauces include milk, milk from fortified plants, broccoli, kale, and sardines and anchovies as they eat bones.

Bok Choy is an excellent source of calcium, fiber, and vitamins A and C.

Whitstein: Plus Bok-cho, I consider it a superfood. It is the green vegetable with the highest calcium bioavailability. The calcium your body gets from food depends on two factors. The bioavailability of the total calcium in food and its calcium, or how well the body absorbs and uses minerals. Milk has 300 milligrams of calcium and 30% bioavailable calcium, while Bokuchoi has 160 milligrams of bioavailable. However, each provides the body with an equivalent amount of calcium: about 87.5 milligrams. In addition to Bok Choy’s excellent calcium bioavailability, it also offers fiber and vitamins A and C. I love preparing this green vegetable superfood with garlic, ginger and olive oil, making it an excellent anti-inflammatory food for joints and overall health.

CNN: Pressed Question: Can I count calcium in milk with coffee?

Nitzkolsky: yes! In the book, Jocelyn and I share that we both nail calcium targets by drinking a little coffee. It is true that consuming more than 300 milligrams of caffeine per day reduces the body’s absorption of calcium, but considering that 8 ounces of coffee contains about 100 milligrams and double shots of espresso contain about 140 milligrams, it’s a high bar.

Whitstein: Milk is also a good source of vitamin D, whether from cows or with plant-based types supplemented. I know that consuming 2,000 IU of Vitamin D per day can benefit bone health It may help reduce joint pain. When it comes to coffee, people are happy to know that they are rich in anti-inflammatory antioxidants. Contains polyphenol quercetin It may help to reduce the painND has anti-inflammatory properties.

I like to add cinnamon to my coffee to add anti-inflammatory effects and glucose control. You can also add whey protein and/or collagen supplements that provide the amino acids your body uses to build muscle.

CNN: What is the relationship between inflammation and joint health?

Whitstein: Inflammation can break down cartilage and contribute to joint pain. Chronic inflammation promotes joint degradation. For example, anti-inflammatory nutrition taken through diet and supplements such as omega-3 fatty acids and curcumin can help relieve symptoms such as pain and swelling.

CNN: What does an anti-inflammatory diet look like?

Nitzkolsky: What I like about recommending anti-inflammatory foods is that it also offers many other benefits, such as lowering the risk of a heart attack, increased lifespan, improved digestion, and giving you more energy.

Anti-inflammatory diets are pea proteins found in many protein powders, which can be non-fat dairy products, animal-based animal-based products such as eggs, fish, chicken, and turkey, or plant-based animal-based such as beans, lentils and soybeans. Anti-inflammatory diets also include foods containing omega-3 fatty acids such as olive oil and fish, as well as healthy fats such as walnuts, flax, chia and basil seeds.

Alliums containing garlic, onions, leeks and shallots are flavorful plants with multiple anti-inflammatory properties. And there is a full range of spices, including turmeric, cayenne, black pepper and inger.

Whitstein: Also importantly, dietary fiber from fruits, vegetables, beans and whole grains provides short chain fatty acids, and their levels are associated with lower levels of inflammation. Fruits and vegetables also contain countless anti-inflammatory phytochemicals. This is a naturally occurring compound that offers health benefits.

It is also important to avoid or limit inflammatory ingredients such as processed meat, lean meat, deep-fried foods, saturated fats, and processed carbohydrates.

According to the author of this new book, making small changes to your diet and exercise routine can have a major impact on your strength and mobility later in life.

CNN: What types of exercise promote bone and joint health?

Whitstein: It is important to incorporate resistance training and impact exercises. The goal is to work on a 150-minute weekly activity, which is the next 150-minute combination. It is a 3-day weight-bearing aerobic exercise, 2-day resistance training, 2-day balancing work and light impact exercises.

It may sound a lot, but these don’t have to be long, intense sessions and some of these types of conditioning can be combined. For example, standing on one foot and doing an overhead press counts as resistance training and balancing tasks. There are multiple things you want to do to stimulate your bones and muscles in different ways, but some of these activities can count as two.

Nitzkolsky: You can also integrate small exercises into your daily life. Just as we lose muscle and bone mass as we age, we lose our ability to balance. You need to deliberately practice your balance a little and work to find balance again.

Stand on one leg while brushing your teeth. Instead of sitting while watching TV, stand on one leg. Try writing your name or alphabet, pretending that your paintbrush is tied to your toes. Write S on the right leg, then switch Z on the left to execute Z. To tackle muscle endurance, try small arm circles. These start very easily, but you’ll get tired after doing it for 2 or 3 minutes.

CNN: What does light impact exercise mean?

Whitstein: These include small jumps, jump jacks, or jump ropes. Studies have shown that jumping 10-50 times a week is sufficient to stimulate bone density. I encourage people to weave them in their day. By hopping a little while waiting for the bus, I raise my heart rate and work on light, impactful conditioning.

CNN: If it causes knee pain, would you recommend jumping?

Nitzkolsky: No, people should hear joint pain! If the jump hurts your knees, focus on other types of conditioning, such as shallow squats. You can also spread the jumps over a day or week. That way, don’t keep doing it too much. Alternatively, for balance, you can change the jump exercise using the back of the chair or something else.

Whitstein: Or try changing things like pool jump. This adds resistance and reduces impact in part. Water-based exercises are not as effective as land jump exercises, but they are definitely beneficial for bone density.

The benefits from some of these movement-based interventions may appear small, but they actually lead to significant risk reductions. Pharmaceutical intervention studies have shown that a 2% increase in lumbar spine density reduces the risk of spinal fractures by 28%. A 4% improvement in hip density reduces the risk of hip fractures by 32%. So even small improvements are important.

CNN: Is it too late to improve bone and joint health?

Nitzkolsky: It’s definitely not. Starting early is ideal, but you can always benefit from improving your diet and exercising. A small start – even a 10 minute activity is better than nothing. Over time, small dietary changes become a sticky habit. The goals are consistency and progressive improvement. Therefore, you can enjoy a life that has lived that long.

Editor’s Note: Sign up for CNN’s Fitness, but a better newsletter series. Ours A 7-part guide It helps to facilitate a healthy routine backed by experts.

Jessica Duron He is a book collaborator, writing coach, and author of “Saved at the Seawall: Stories from the Stories from the Stories from the Stories from the Stories” and “My River Chronicles: Adreakovering the America.”

Former in-n-out employee sues burger chain for discrimination against hair

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A former in-n-out employee is suing West Coast burger chain for discriminatory treatment and layoffs for natural hair.

Elijah Obeng filed a lawsuit against IN-N-Out, claiming that he was discriminated against and fired based on his natural hairstyle and texture. Obeng alleges that he suffered damage from the termination, including emotional distress, reputational damage and job loss, court documents say. He is seeking $3 million in damages and a $200,000 salary. He may have earned or earned in the future since his firing.

In-N-Out declined to comment on USA Today on June 18, citing the ongoing lawsuit. Obeng and his attorneys did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The lawsuit denies “humiliating and discriminatory” behaviour as in-n-out

According to court documents, Obeng began working at the In-N-Out restaurant in June 2020 after graduating from high school. He continued to work for the chain until he was fired in spring 2024.

Obeng went to work with his natural hair, following In-N-Out’s grooming and unified policies, the lawsuit reads. When Obeng’s hair became longer, he was instructed by the administrator to cut or change it to fit under the required uniform hat.

To follow the policy, Obeng began wearing hair in braids. Management told him, according to court documents, he needed to cut off his agonizing burn, but found it “humiliating and discriminatory.” When he did not cut his stomp bird, Obeng began to experience different treatments. He was punished for minor policy violations, including not attending a work meeting that his colleagues allegedly did not face, the lawsuit reads.

In-N-Out’s grooming and unified policies are not easily accessible online, but in fact the forum shows that male workers must arrive to change clean shaving without face hair.

Around May 25, 2024, Obeng recorded his final shift at In-N-Out. Once he arrived, management told him to go home and shave his sled and come back, court documents said. Instead, Obeng left and texted his supervisor as he returned for his next shift.

A few days later, Obeng was fired, according to court documents. However, Obeng argues that his ending is due to his “ancestors, colours, races”, including his “natural hair and hair textures.”

Former employee states the Crown Act for in-n-out violations

In the lawsuit, Obeng says In-N-Out violated the Crown Act, a law that prohibits employers from discrimination based on hairstyles and textures. Aiming to “create a world of respect and openness for natural hair,” the law was passed in 2019 with the help of Holly Mitchell, the first director of Dub, Crown Union and Los Angeles County. As of June 18th, the Crown Act is a law in 27 states, according to the Crown Act website.

Gretacross is a national trend reporter for USA Today. Story ideas? Please email her gcross@usatoday.com.

Trump’s approval for June? He declared these new holidays

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  • President Donald Trump criticized the number of federal holidays in the true social post that fell in June.
  • Trump delces new holidays during his second presidency, including World President’s Day and American Gulf Day. They are not paid holidays.
  • Trump has not approved June in 2025.

President Donald Trump said there is “too much non-operating leave” in the United States, but he has not eschewed from other public holiday declarations.

In clear criticism on June 19, Trump said in his true social post on June 19 that non-operating holidays would cost billions of dollars to keep businesses shut down. Private businesses are not forced to close on federal holidays like in June, when the last black people enslaved by the Confederate forces were ordered for free to commemorate the events of June 19, 1865.

Trump has declared a new holiday opposed to the number of paid leave for federal workers in the past.

Trump says “too many non-working holidays”

Trump’s post in June criticized the number of federal holidays where most federal workers have paid holidays. There will be 12 federal public holidays in 2025. Most federal holidays are created by laws passed through Congress.

However, during his second presidency, Trump issued declarations of other holidays that are not paid on holidays to recognize special days such as:

“We already have too many holidays in America,” he wrote in the May 5th Truth Social Post when announcing the World War II and World War II holidays. “We don’t have enough days left in the year. We were workers at the time, and now we are workers!”

Did Trump admit it in June?

Trump’s 2025 Truth Social Post didn’t mention it in June.

White House press secretary Caroline Levitt was asked by a reporter earlier in the day whether Trump is expected to commemorate June.

“I’m not tracking his signature today,” she replied. “I know this is a federal holiday.”

As of June 20th, the June declaration has not been released from the White House.

Trump previously honored June, including his first term as president. But Trump sparked controversy in 2020 after scheduling his first rally since the Covid-19 lockdown in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He later changed the date of the event.

Who signed the law in June?

Former President Joe Biden.

It has long been celebrated by black Americans, but became prominent in the nation in 2020 amid protests against racial inequality. It was officially recognized as a federal holiday in 2021 by then President Joe Biden.

What are the federal government’s “non-labor” holidays?

According to the U.S. Personnel Management, the full list of 2025 US federal public holidays is as follows:

  • Wednesday, January 1st: New Year’s Day
  • Monday, January 20th: Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Coincidentally, the date was inauguration, and Trump was second to the 47th president of the United States.
  • Monday, February 17th: Washington’s birthday, celebrating George Washington, a few days after Abraham Lincoln’s birthday. Many state and local governments have designated it as President’s Day.
  • Monday, May 26th: Anniversary
  • Thursday, June 19th: June
  • Friday, July 4th: Independence Day or July 4th
  • Monday, September 1st: Labor Day
  • Monday, October 13th: Columbus Day
  • Tuesday, November 11th: Veterans’ Day
  • Thursday, November 27th: Thanksgiving Day
  • Thursday, December 25th: Christmas Day

Contributors: Janine Santucci, Saman Shafik, Melina Khan, Cheryl McCloud, CA Bridges; USA Today Network

Kinsey Crowley is a Trump Connect reporter for the USA Today Network. Contact her at kcrowley@gannett.com. Follow her on X and Tiktok @kinseycrowley or Bluesky @kinseycrowley.bsky.social.

British lawmakers vote to legalize death aid.

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London
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British lawmakers narrowly approve bills that legalize the death aid of terminally ill people, conclude difficult debates in Parliament and across the nation, crossing political, religious and legal divisions.

The MP was finalized on the question, giving him 291 votes with 314 votes. The bill split lawmakers and evoked the wider British conversations with their constituents, but now they will move to the Senate for the final round of surveillance.

With Friday’s vote, the UK will go smoothly to join a small club in the country that legalized the process and join one of the largest countries per population to allow it.

This allows people with terminal states to live to take away material and deprive material as long as they can make their own decisions. Two doctors and the panel must register for the selection.

Canada, New Zealand, Spain, and most of Australia, like some US states, including Oregon, Washington and California, allow them to die in some way.

The vote in Parliament on Friday coincided with the indicted public debate over whether the nation should decide which choices are available to Britons at the last moments of life.

Supporters included Esther Rantzen, the BBC television presenter for advanced lung cancer.

“What does that mean if you don’t vote to change the law today?” asked Kim Reedbeater, the MP who introduced the bill last year. “That means there are more heartbreaking stories, including terminally ill people and their families, pain and trauma, suicide attempts, PTSD, lonely trips to Switzerland, police investigations and more.”

The option is “not a choice between living and dying or not. It’s a choice for terminal people about how they die.”

However, opponents have raised the issue in a legislative process that criticised the bill on religious and ethical grounds and accused it of opaqueness.

Protesters against bills outside of Congress.

Former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown argued that amending the UK’s tense end-of-life care system should be prioritized, writing that the bill “privileges the legal right to help dying without guaranteeing the rights equivalent to high-quality palliative care for those who are close to death.”

Critical people “have to first correct their health and social care systems,” Labour MP Vicki Foxcroft told Congress Friday. “They want us to be lawmakers and help them live, not die.”

Friday’s discussion was concluded by free vote. This means that the MP is allowed to decide or oppose the bill according to its conscience, and is freed from partisan whipping. It was the third final time that MPS MP voted for the topic after an earlier reading in November.

Prime Minister Kiel Starmer was one of those who voted in favor of the bill despite objections from some of the opposition camps that he abstained to prevent impact on other lawmakers.

Even if the bill was passed, some of its critics were encouraged by the results on Friday. The effort lost support from 16 lawmakers compared to November over the months of controversy that was added to the bill during the committee’s oversight stage.

Most notably, the previous provisions that stipulate each case of dying aid must be approved by two doctors and the judge must be removed amid concerns over the court being choked. The bill was tweaked to require approval from two doctors and three panels.

“We obviously won the debate,” Tim Fallon, a former Liberal Democrat leader who opposed the bill, wrote to X on Friday after the vote.

“With increasing majority and opposition from the expert group, the lords now feel rightly that they have the right to oppose it,” Fallon said in the now-repeated post. “To my pleasant surprise, this isn’t over!”

In a few countries, you can die in some way, but the details of the law vary widely. The proposed UK bills line up widely in Oregon’s models and do not go to Switzerland, the Netherlands, or Canada, which allow people with terminal illnesses to support death in cases of suffering. That’s different from euthanasia. This is the process in which others intentionally end someone’s life in order to relieve their suffering.

Now it is a crime to help someone die in England and Wales and will be punished in prison for up to 14 years. On the other hand, euthanizing a person is considered murder or manslaughter.

Two years after the train derailment, the NIH to commission long-term health research for residents of East Palestine

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The National Institutes of Health said Thursday it would fund long-term health research for residents of East Palestine, Ohio.

For a long time, the community has asked the government to do more to answer questions about the mental and physical effects of disasters.

The funding will be made available through the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

In 2024, under the Biden administration, the Institute funded six two-year rapid response projects to study various aspects of post-disaster exposure and health issues. These projects were worth more than $1 million in total.

The new grant will award up to $10 million for one to three projects over the next five years.

The NIH said Vice President JD Vance, who was an Ohio Senator, sought funding when the derailment occurred.

“NIH is working to ensure that people in East Palestine and the surrounding communities listen, take care of them and get the answers that are appropriate for them,” NIH Director Dr. Jay Batacharya said in a news release. “This interdisciplinary research program will focus on public health tracking and community health monitoring, supporting health care decisions and precautions.”

Misti Alison, a resident of East Palestine, got a job as mayor after the disaster and exercised for a long-term health survey in the area, and she said she was surprised by the announcement. She is on the board of one of the current community health research boards.

“This next level of funding will allow us to carry out comprehensive and shocking research that can really make a difference in the region,” Allison said.

She notes that the funding announcement states that the study will be co-developed with community input. “This really ensures that our concerns and needs are at the forefront,” she said. “That’s really great.”

More than two years after the disaster, symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, respiratory complaints and even cancer have skyrocketed, Alison said.. However, she noted that cancer has many causes, and it is difficult to directly link them from derailment to chemical exposure.

Jessica Connard, who developed asthma several months after her son breathed toxic smoke from the derailment, said the announcement led to a “complex combination of emotions.”

“We’ve had real symptoms for two and a half years and all we’ve received is gas lighting and firing from state, local and federal agencies,” Conard said.

“We still need an organized medical response, and this should have happened right after the disaster,” she said. “This feels like a political afterthought.

“My hope is that this $10 million won’t just fund another academic report on the shelf without a viable takeaway,” she said.

Allison said the community has proposed an emergency declaration to activate special provisions for victims of environmental exposure.

“These funds will be a lifeline for many families who are still dealing with health concerns and some financial difficulties,” she said.

Dr Andrew Welton, a civil and environmental engineer at Purdue University, said the need for funding is disappointing as he helps the community assess the impact of the disaster. He said indoor air testing would be insufficient if governments and communities were to make more money available to prevent exposure to residents in the first place.

“It’s positive that it could help us investigate questions about long-term health impacts, but it wasn’t necessary if the right decision was made and the people at the agency didn’t fail with the public,” Welton said.

The NIH said it would accept applications for the East Palestine Research Grant until July 21st.

The sunken Bayesian superyacht was lifted from the seabed

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Rome
CNN

Ten months after the gorgeous superyacht Bayesian sunk off the coast of Sicily in a sudden storm, the salvage crew lifted 50 meters (164 feet) from the seabed on Friday afternoon.

The superyacht was scheduled to be lifted over the weekend, but the TMC Marine rescue crew said the process went faster than expected.

The 56-meter (184-foot) superyacht fell within a minute when Hurricane Force winds swept through the area on August 19, 2024. Seven people have died, including British tech giant Mike Lynch and his 18-year-old daughter Hannah. Fifteen people survived, including Lynch’s wife. The company owns all ships except the $40 million ship, the ship’s captain and one crew.

Kroger Junior Cake Tiktok goes viral: “This is ock ha ha!”

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“If you lack creativity, why are you bothered,” wrote the creator of Tiktok.

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Kroger is facing a Tiktok rebound after a June cake shortage video went viral for sale at one of the grocery locations.

Recorded at a store in Atlanta, Georgia, the video showed several cakes decorated to a minimum on June 19th in honor of federal public holidays.

“This is ock ha ha!” creator @blaq.monalisa wrote in the caption of the June 18 video, which has been viewed over 10 million times since June 20th.

The next day, the creator said that the cake could no longer be purchased. USA Today contacted Kroger for comment.

Video shows an inactive Kurogar junior cake: “Free @last”

Atlanta grocery stores sold several cakes in plain designs, including lettering “Free @ Last,” “Free June 19th,” and lettering “Free.”

“This is some bull,” the creator said in the video. “Who’s this ugly a-s —?”

Users said they had no manager at the time, but they planned to return to the store the next day to talk.

“Y’ll adorns everything else around this cutely,” the creator said. “Everything else here is cute, but for June, do you want to throw something on a terrible cookie cake and expect someone to buy it? It’s the Bulls–“

We have every viral moment: Sign up for everyone’s talking newsletter on USA Today.

Social media responds to Kroger’s June cake: “I’m extremely disappointed.”

Users agreed to the creators about uninspired cake decorations in response to comments.

“This is fun but not funny,” one person said. “I’m extremely disappointed with Kroger.”

Another said the shop should “firing the whole bakery intentionally.”

“If they hadn’t grown in June, they would have thought it was a welcome home from prison cakes,” one user wrote.

Others have missed Mark during their vacation with retailers over the past few years, like they were pulled out of the store from Walmart’s June 2022 ice cream.

Tiktoker says Kroger Junteenth Cakes is no longer available

The day after posting the original video, @Blaq.Monalisa shared another Tiktok.

“Tictok, I did it all,” they said. It is unclear whether Kroger has removed the product or purchased it.

“I still feel like there’s some way they don’t replace it with a better June cake,” the user said in the video.

Melina Kahn is a national trending reporter for USA Today. She can be contacted at melina.khan@usatoday.com.

Lawmakers suggest banning ice, which prohibits law enforcement from wearing masks

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Two California lawmakers are pushing for law enforcement from covering their faces when arresting in the state.

The “secret police law,” introduced by two Democrats in the California Senate, is a response to the sweeping of immigrants across the country by masked agents of plain cross who increasingly refuse to identify themselves by the names and agents in which he works.

“Recent federal operations in California have created a deep, fearful environment,” Sen. Scott Wiener of D-San Francisco said in a statement. “If you want the public to trust law enforcement, you can’t act like a secret police in an authoritarian state.”

The now widespread protest against the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement was ignited in early June when street protests became violent in Los Angeles. California lawmakers were one of President Donald Trump’s most vocal enemies.

The bill, co-hosted by D-Berkeley’s Jesse Arreguin, also requires officers to identify uniforms. It exempts SWAT teams and allows for the use of medical grade masks, which are used to protect workers in emergencies such as Wildfires.

“This bill ensures that law enforcement is easy to identify and maintains its trust and accountability,” Arreguin said in a statement.

Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said in a June 20 post on social media site X that Ice Agent “has increased by 500%.”

She did not provide a total number of attacks or an increase time frame. However, the circulating video online shows an increasingly violent conflict between masked federal agents and civilians seeking to document or prevent arrests.

“These are brave men and women who have brought to life to arrest violent criminals and gang members,” she said.

Local police officers usually wear uniforms with nameplates and carry badges. US border patrol agents wear olive green uniforms with name tags and agent patches. FBI agents usually show badges when interacting with subjects and civilians.

However, ice agents are rarely even.

How Martha’s Vineyards Mark Milestones

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In a frenzy that is interested in the 50-year film milestones, the island celebrates and educates everything about sharks.

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Summer 1974, A. Boudin Van Liper had just graduated from school when Hollywood came to town.

Van Liper, who was 11 at the time, went to the beach with a friend on the beach at Martha’s vineyard, and watched filming what would become Steven Spielberg’s “Jaws.” When the crew called for volunteers, the two were rushed into the water and pretended to panic due to the scene where the two children use cardboard fins to scare the swimmer.

“It was a very short Hollywood and a very short brush, but 50 years later — it’s cool to know that it played a very, very small role in helping the film get made,” Van Leiper said.

Like many locals who helped create their first summer blockbuster, Van Liper is currently preparing for the elaborate summer celebration of “Jaws”‘s 50th anniversary.

When released on June 20, 1975, “Jaws” felt terrifying in the minds of beach fans across the country, leading to shark phobia and increased trophy hunting, destroying shark populations. Viewers say the film scared them from the beach, pool and bathtub for a while, but that horror has become an American charm.

The “Jaw” fandom is a major tourist draw for the island, with some owners expecting the biggest summer ever. As the population and reputation of sharks off the Massachusetts coast begin to recover, many use the 50th anniversary of the “Jaw” to remind us how important sharks are and how to keep beach fans increasingly safe as they are close to predators.

“At the time, when ‘Jaws’ came out, we knew nothing about sharks and no one knew the importance of the role they played in their ecosystem,” said Megan Winton, a scientist at the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy in nearby Cape Cod. “We still learn new things about it every day, but learning how to live with the great white shark is tough.”

“Jaws” fans are flooded with Martha’s vineyards

Martha’s Vineyard – a real-life version of Spielberg’s fictional Amity Island – we’ve been planning the 50th anniversary of “Jaws.”

There will be documentaries about the film screenings and their production, live performances of the film’s well-known scores, and parties where fans can meet the cast and some of the crew, Erica Ashton and Alessandra Hagerty have said they are executives and assistant directors of Martha’s Vineyard Chamber of Commerce.

Most shops and restaurants are decorated with “Jaws”-themed products, from custom poured shark candles to Murdoch’s fudged, bloody cranberry sweet treats. Even the local baseball team – the Shark – will play this weekend.

“There’s something like a ‘jaw’ guy,” Hagerty said.

The island can see as many as 200,000 visitors during its peak summer, according to the Chamber of Commerce. However, with the hotel fully booked and almost all anniversary weekend events sold out, authorities are hoping to see a surge in visitors that is tens of thousands higher than usual and far exceed previous events related to the film.

Michael Khalid said he already has “exponentially more” advance bookings for the “Jaws” walking tour than in the past 15 years. “I’m sure this will be my biggest season, at least from the ‘Jaws’ side,” said Khalid, owner of Edgar Town Tour Company.

Curry leads the group on a walking tour of Edgartown, which reflects the paths filmed by police chief Martin Brody, played by one of the film’s main characters, Roy Scheider. On his full island tour, he takes visitors to film far away, such as the fishing village of Menemusha, where Robert Shaw painted by Brody and Grizzle shark hunter Quint, and Brody and Grizzle shark hunter Quint, were bathed in the sails, and Brody and Grizzle shark hunter Quint, among others.

Often, Curry pulls clips from his iPad movies to show tourists that the island has little change since the film was filmed.

“It’s possible that one house added a bay window,” he said. “As I have shown, the biggest change is the colour of the fire hydrant.”

“Jaws” event encourages tourists to “respect the locals”

Fans of “Jaw” have already gathered at Martha’s Vineyard Museum to check out memorabilia and film props, including one of the heads of a fisherman who was attacked by a shark in the film. According to Cathy Mayonnet, the museum’s managing director, the exhibition dominated the entire second floor of the museum in five years.

“We’ve been busy ever since Memorial Day when we opened the exhibit, so we’ve seen a lot of people,” she said. “I walk through the museum every day and talk to people visiting the island for the first time.”

Much of the programming focuses on the islanders who helped make the film, but the museum will host shark lessons for children and also speak by marine conservation advocate Wendy Benchley, widow of “Jaws” writer Peter Benchley, Mayonne said. Both the late Benchley and Spielberg have expressed regret over the impact the book and film had on real sharks.

“Part of the exhibit on “Jaws” is a room dedicated to teaching more about sharks, and to the efforts to understand and protect them,” said Van Leiper, a research librarian at the museum, preparing to bring the film’s three-hour deep dive to the sold-out crowd. “So we hope we can do a little to promote the overall ‘local’ attitude towards them. ”

Locals aren’t the only people using anniversary to pay attention to the threats sharks are facing. Long-distance swimmer from England, Louis Pugh bravely confronted the island’s chilly waters.

Pugh embarked on a brutal 12-day swim around Martha’s vineyards shortly after the first shark sighting of the season in the area. He did not find any sharks on this journey, but he felt cautious in the water after breaking the unspoken rules among swimmers by talking about animals frequently.

“I saw it when I was 12 (‘Jaws’). I’ve never seen it again. I’m scared of sharks. It’s normal, isn’t it? ” he said with a laugh. “But I’m afraid of a shark-free world.”

More than a third of Americans say they are afraid of sharks, and the attribute that directly fears “Jaws” says sharks are in real danger. Sharks bite dozens of people each year, but humans kill millions of sharks around the world.

Pugh – celebrated finishing his swimming with ice cream on the beach before heading to the UN’s marine conference in France – called “Ecosides,” known as murder.

“We need to educate ourselves about them, number one. Second, we need to respect them, and lastly, we really need to protect them.”

A “long road to go” to research and conservation of sharks

Large white shark populations in the Atlantic Ocean could have decreased by up to 70% before being designated as a banned species in most American waters in 1997.

The population around Massachusetts has begun to rebound as shark and seal protections increased, their preferred prey said, Winton. “What we’re seeing in Cape Cod is that it’s a really big conservation success story,” she said.

Along with its success, there are new challenges. Animals spend about half the time hunting seals in shallow waters offshore, and if swimmers or surfers get in the way, a fatal encounter can occur, Winton said.

In the summer of 2018, one man survived narrowly after being bitten by a shark on the Cape Cod National Coast, while another man died after a shark bit him while boogie boarding.

“People were scared. They wanted something about it, so they wanted fatal control measures,” Winton said.

Winton added that human conflict remains the biggest threat to white sharks in Massachusetts waters, with researchers increasingly encountering sharks with boat strike injuries. White sharks are considered “vulnerable” to endangered by the World Wildlife Fund and the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Endangered Species List.

And while actor Richard Dreyfus’ portrayal of oceanographer Matt Hooper in particular, prompted many marine biologists to study white sharks, Winton said the researchers still don’t have the answers to basic questions about their biology, such as giving them their biology and birth.

“We’ve come a long way since the ‘Jaw’ in terms of shark conservation, understanding of sharks, and appreciation for them, and how important they are to our ocean health,” Winton said. “But we still have a long way to go.”

CDC Vaccine Advisors Vote for Thimeromonal with Influenza Shots at the First Meeting of a New Panel

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Newly posted agendas for the meeting of appointed groups next week of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s external vaccine advisors include discussion and vote on the flu vaccine thimerosal.

The meeting, which will begin on June 25th for two days, is the first of a newly established group of eight advisory committees on vaccination practices. US Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. dismissed a previous group of 17 experts last week claiming they had a conflict of interest.

However, many new panelists have raised concerns about the vaccine’s position, serving as expert witnesses in lawsuits against vaccine manufacturers, and raising concerns about the vaccine’s position, including proposing without evidence that the Covid-19 vaccine kills young people and should be removed from the market soon.

It is not clear that discussion and votes will be involved at next week’s meeting regarding the flu vaccine thimeromonal, and presenters of the meeting’s information are listed on the agenda as “TBD.” A spokesman for the HHS asked about the nature of the discussion and voted for the agenda posted.

Thimeromonkeys are mercury-based compounds used to prevent bacteria and fungi from growing in vaccines, and the CDC says data from multiple studies “does not show evidence of harm caused by low doses of thimeromonkeys in vaccines.”

Nevertheless, the use of thimerosal in vaccines has been significantly reduced since the US Food and Drug Administration asked vaccine manufacturers for details on their plans to remove it. The FDA now states, “All vaccines that are routinely recommended for children under the age of six in the United States are available in thimeromonal-free formulations.”

Preservatives are still used in multi-dose vials of seasonal influenza vaccines.

As thimeromonkeys were largely removed from the pediatric vaccine, autism rates continue to rise, and the CDC notes that “the opposite of what would be expected if thimeromonkeys caused autism.”

Thimerosal has long been the focus of Kennedy, who published a book called “Thimerosal: Let the Science Salk” in 2014.

However, the CDC points out that there are two types of mercury, methylmercury and ethylmercury, and that high levels of the first level can be toxic to people. Thimerosal contains Ethylmercury, the agency says, “This is less likely to cause harm, as it is cleared from the human body more rapidly than methylmercury.”

Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine scientist at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and external vaccine advisor for the FDA, suggests that the fact that thimeromonal is on the agenda of Kennedy’s newly appointed vaccine advisor could make public claims against evidence that preservatives are dangerous.

“What we’re trying to do is make sure those vaccines become available and become expensive,” Offit told CNN. “It certainly won’t make them safer.”

Offitt pointed out that manufacturers cannot deliver these vaccines quickly, which “will lead to a shortage of vaccines, making them more expensive.”

Also new features in the agenda are discussions and proposed recommendations regarding measles, mumps, rubella, and water cell (or chicken pox) vaccines for children under the age of 5. It is not clear what the nature of that argument is, and the presenter is also listed as “TBD.”

The combination vaccine known as MMRV has been approved in the US as Proquad since 2005, and the CDC notes that although the vaccine combinations receive fewer injections than individual shots, they are at a higher risk of fever and febrile attacks 5-12 days after the first dose in children aged 1 to 2 years. Administering a water cell vaccine apart from the MMR vaccine avoids this increased risk, and the CDC notes that it is “very low for both options.”

It’s not clear if that’s the focus of the presentation and recommendations, but Offit said, “I don’t know what’s going to add here,” as vaccine advisors have already been doing that discussion.

According to the June 9 federal registration, the meeting is scheduled to take place over three days and is now shortened to two people. The topic list is much slimmer, although it still includes votes on RSV vaccinations for pregnant women and children, as well as planned discussions about Covid-19, Chikungunya and Anthrax vaccines. There is no longer any discussion about cytomegalovirus vaccines, human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines, Lyme disease vaccines, meningococcal vaccines, and pneumococcal vaccines.

During an internal meeting between CDC employees on Tuesday, leadership members told staff that some agenda items from the upcoming ACIP meeting were not included because they were still speeding up, according to a CDC employee who requested anonymity for fear of Reprisal.

The employee called the reasoning “A transparent lie. They would have had to speed up all these new people if they hadn’t fired the old ones.”

The agenda also includes many “TBD” lists for presenters, including COVID-19 vaccine safety and RSV vaccinations. At previous meetings, these presentations on Covid-19 were made by Dr. Fiona Havers and Dr. Lakshmi Panagiotakopoulos.

“My career in public health and vaccinology began with a deep seated desire to help the most vulnerable members of our population,” Panagio Tacopoulos wrote in an email to a former ACIP member obtained by CNN.

US stock futures rise as Trump gives time for diplomacy with Iran

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US stock futures have gone into extremes after President Donald Trump said he was pondering whether to join Israel in an attack on Iran.

According to White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt, he will decide to hit Iran within two weeks. Iran said it would not negotiate with the US unless Israel halts the attack, but he will do diplomacy for a while.

The only way to end the imposed war is to “unconditionally stop” enemy invasions, Iranian President Masuud Pezeshkian said on Friday in a post in X.

Still, senior US officials are preparing for the possibility of a strike against Iran, citing people familiar with the issue and pointing to potential plans for a weekend strike.

The rising tensions led to an initial rise in crude oil prices and lower inventory. But by 8am, stock futures and oil prices had reversed the course. Futures linked to the Blue Chip Dowin Index rose 0.15% or 63 points to 42,575. The Broad S&P 500 futures added 0.14% (8.5 points) to 6,042.75. And the high-tech Nasdaq futures scored 0.16%, or 35.75 points and 21,981.00 points. Oil prices fell 0.29% to $74.92.

Benchmark 10 years yield rose to 4.435%.

Trump vs Powell (again)

Trump has once again criticised Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell after changing this week.

Trump called Powell “disruptive” in a social media post, and Powell said that stabilizing the rate would cost the US “hundreds of millions of dollars.”

Corporate News

  • Carmax results surpassed analyst forecasts in the first three months of the fiscal year.

Medora Lee is a money, market and personal finance reporter for USA Today. mjlee@usatoday.com and Subscribe to our free daily money newsletter Personal finance tips and business news every Monday to Friday.

Pacer beats the Thunder and forces Game 7

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Two teams now play in Game 6 of the NBA Finals.

I met one instantly. Indiana defeated Oklahoma City 108-91 in Game 6 on Thursday, June 19th.

And so, the Indiana Pacers are still alive, the Thunder is denied the NBA Championship, and the NBA Finals heads to Game 7, a history-designed game.

The Pacers have never won an NBA championship, and the Thunder is the first to win since moving from Seattle to Oklahoma City in 2008.

This series before and after is defined by turnover, 3-point shooting, step-ups and lack of momentum from one game to the next.

The winners and losers of Game 6 between Thunder and Pacers are:

Thunder-Pacers Game 6 Winner

Pacers swarm and suffocate in defense

Indiana looked almost like thunder in defense. Oklahoma City posted a top-ranked NBA defense in the regular season, using active hands to deflect passes, force turnovers, quickly and decisively rotate, preventing appearance and keeping it offensive along the periphery.

The Pacers have driven lightning to 21 sales, providing ample transition opportunities. Indiana swiped 16 steels – compared to just four by Oklahoma City. In fact, the Pacers generated more steals than the Thunder had assists (14). Indiana actually dialed the pressure on Kurtle and relied on early in the series, so they chose to suffocate OKC with intention on the half court.

TJ McConnell, Obi Toppin and Pacers Bench shine again

One of the Pacers’ stats in this NBA final was bench points. The Indiana state bench outscored Oklahoma City in five of its six games so far. And Thursday night’s 48-37 advantage didn’t show the big picture given the Thunder pulled the starter at the beginning of the fourth quarter.

TJ McConnell is an exception and a source of consistent sparks and positive plays. He is the most efficient pacer in the half court set, and his efforts are infectious. He was first tracked in 1970-71, so he recorded 12 points, nine rebounds, six assists and four steals, marking for the first time when the bench player recorded these numbers in the NBA Finals game. Forward Obitopin, who developed a stable knockdown jumper, added 20 points and 6 rebounds. When the bench of the pacer plays like this, they are difficult to beat.

Indiana spreads wealth

Pacers all have a series, so they spread the ball and the whole team was bigger than the parts. They reached double digits on scoring to six players. Indiana is now the first team in NBA postseason history to score at least 200 points in one playoff history: Pascal Siakam (456), Tyrees Halliburton (390), Miles Turner (311), Aaron Nesmith (288), Andrew Nenbird (272), Benedict Maturin (219), Obspin (219), Andrew Nenbird (272) (202).

Thunder-Pacers Game 6 Loser

Lightning spin

The Thunder had 21 turnovers, leading to 19 pace points. It couldn’t happen, and it was the second time in the series. The Thunder had 25 turnovers in Game 1 loss. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander committed a career-high eight turnovers.

He had more spins than field goal (7).

“They didn’t put pressure on the full court like they did, which led to more sales. I wasn’t expecting that,” Gilgaus Alexander said. “But whatever it was, they did it right. … They were definitely low on the pickup. I’m not sure. I think some of them are careless, unfocused, not engaged.”

Thunder Offense

Thunder’s sales led to inconsistency violations where they could not find a rhythm. Oklahoma City shot 41.9% from the field and 26.7% with three pointers, with only 14 assists on 31 field goals. The ball’s movement was not there, the shooting wasn’t there, and it was the second time in 22 playoff games where the Thunder scored under 100 points.

The Thunder Starter was 13-1 with a 3-pointer, with Chetholmgren scoring just four points in a 9-2 shooting, with Alex Caruso not scoring.

Thunder Bench

The third unit of Oklahoma City, Isaiah Joe, Jaylin Williams, Ajay Mitchell, Dillon Jones and Osmane Dien, played well during the mop-up, making the final score cruel to less cruel.

However, Oklahoma City’s scores from the second unit were limited. Caruso, Aaron Wiggins, Cason Wallace and Kenrich Williams scored 10 points in a 12-12 shooting. Indiana’s main reserves scored 41 points.

Sports fans who haven’t seen it

This is an incredible series with a compelling swing from game to game. Both teams are star, deep, hard-working and well-coached. That was true at the start of the playoffs and remained true throughout the six games of the final. There are all the basketball elements that fans want. Includes Game 7.

Why is Morocco killing thousands of stray dogs ahead of the 2030 World Cup?

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CNN

Dead dogs are a common sight for 19-year-old Fatimazara, from Ifleen, a small mountain town known as “Morocco’s Switzerland.” Fatimazara asked CNN not to publish her last name, fearing that she would be targeted by local governments.

“When I walk to school, I go past a pool of blood on the street,” she recalled in an interview with CNN. “At one point I realized it’s not normal for your day to start walking on a corpse.”

According to Fatimazara, the killings were particularly bad last year. “We used to have occasional shootings every few months,” she said. “Now they’re more systematic. They kill dogs like it’s a sport – just like people hunt ducks.”

Animal welfare groups say the killings are part of a campaign to “clean up” Morocco’s streets ahead of the 2030 FIFA World Cup, with the country co-hosting with Spain and Portugal, while Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina all hosting opening matches.

“Individuals armed with rifles often go out into the streets at night and shoot dogs,” Red, head of the International Union for Animal Welfare and Protection (IAWPC), told CNN. “Others are rounded up and taken to a local government clinic that is poisoned. They simply disappear.”

Omar Jaid, chairman of Iphreen State Tourism Council, told CNN the city has “begun cleaning up the stray dog ​​town as part of the preparations for the 2030 FIFA World Cup.” Ifrane is a drive (approximately 64 km) from Fez Stadium. This is one of the tournament venues that will host numerous national soccer teams along with thousands of visitors.

Gid added that animals have been rounded up and moved to a pharmacy where they can get vaccinated. He emphasized that he is a “dog lover.”

However, Fatimazara witnessed something different.

On the night of February 9th, 2024, she was woken up to the sound of gunshots. Outside she discovers three dead dogs in the trash can. One of them was a husky, a man she knew from the neighborhood.

“I was terrified,” she recalled. “I carried the husky out of the bloody trash can. I didn’t know what to do. I felt very helpless.”

CNN cannot independently confirm who killed the dog. CNN contacted Ifrane Municipality for comment but received no response.

“Straw dogs pose serious public health risks, especially as an airline with rabies,” Mohamed Rudani, head of the Public Health and Green Space Department of the Morocco Ministry of Interior, told CNN. “Around 100,000 people are bitten every year, with 40% of whom are under the age of 15.”

In 2019, the Moroccan government introduced the TRAP-Neuter-Vaccine-Release (TNVR) program, a humanitarian strategy for controlling stray dog ​​populations. “We are working with local governments to implement this in compliance with animal welfare standards,” says Roudani.

However, there is a major obstacle. The local government, not the central government, is in charge of managing stray animals. “There’s a legal vacuum,” Rudani explained. “Some cities still rely on traditional methods, and there are no laws currently against killing stray dogs.”

In some cities, stray dogs are poisoned with strichinin, a pesticide that is banned in many countries to cause inhumane suffering. “We have to deal with this issue in a different way,” Rudani said. “There will be no more genocides. There will be no more streching. We need an ethical solution.”

CNN has checked footage of dog culling in cities such as Marrakech, Casablanca, Agadir and Ifrane. Video, filmed in May 2025, shows the dog being restrained by metal wire and thrown into a pickup truck already filled with corpses.

PETA activists break into the pitch and hold signs to read

And it’s not just animals at risk.

On January 24th, Abderahim Sounani, a barista in the town of Ben Ahmed, had just finished his shift when a stray dog ​​passed him and was chased by a car.

Gunshots rang out, three bullets missed the dog and instead hit Suununi with his knees and thighs. The 34-year-old spoke about the incident in a local media interview and later confirmed details of the call with CNN.

Sounni didn’t believe the shooter saw him, but instead focused on the dog. He cried out for help, and the vehicle rushed, bleeding on the sidewalk.

Bystanders spot him and he was rushed to a hospital in Casablanca where doctors were unable to remove the bullet. He later said police informed him that the vehicle belonged to the local government.

CNN contacted local police who declined to comment on the incident. Sounni declined to provide CNN with further comments, saying she felt overwhelmed by media attention.

“It’s put people in danger,” IAWPC president Ward told CNN. “You can’t fire a gunshot on the street, especially during the World Cup, where there are thousands of tourists.”

In February this year, a coalition of 10 animal rights groups urged FIFA to address the “increased arrests and culling” of Moroccan stray dogs ahead of the 2030 World Cup.

In a letter to the FIFA executive director, parent Jane Goodall said it was “absolutely alley” to see the Moroccan government “engage in the massive killing of street dogs as part of an obvious effort to make the FIFA World Cup venue “presentable” to foreign visitors.”

Although FIFA did not respond to the letter, Morocco’s World Cup bid told CNN in a statement that “outlined its commitment to animal rights protection,” including an expansion of “Strey Dog’s clinics and support programs.”

“FIFA is following local counterparts with the aim of ensuring that their commitment is supported,” the statement said.

As international scrutiny grows, dog catchers appear to have become more cautious, especially in tourist hubs like Marrakech.

Jane Wilson and Louise Jackson – two British residents living in Marrakech – said up until last year, the van had a cage on its back, showing the dead and lively dogs in sight. Now the unmarked white van quietly patrolled the streets and grabbed stray animals, they said.

In Casablanca, the animals are wrapped up by a van with the logo of local government development company Casabia. The company’s website, owned by the municipality, claims that “teams of experts are permanently mobilized,” and “catch and trap” more than 20,000 stray dogs a year.

CNN reviewed footage prepared by animal rights groups showing dogs being dragged into a Casabia car with metal chains. The little dogs are shown to be caught in a fishing net, and their bodies bump into pain before being thrown into a white van.

India's Ahmedabad student is holding a banner during a protest on January 23rd in response to news reports of a massive culling of stray dogs in Morocco as part of the street cleaning ahead of the 2030 FIFA World Cup.

Originally from Indiana, Captain Erin moved to Casablanca with her husband last year, and soon became a wanderer in her hometown. “They are great creatures,” she said. “I’ve started caring for two puppies: vaccinate them and feed them and watch them grow.”

After that, the dogs from the neighborhood began to disappear. The captain told CNN that Casa Baia Vans were wandering the streets day and night. One night, she says she came for her puppy.

“They took them from outside our house and kicked them,” she recalls. “One broke a small leg, the other was kicked and killed. It was a nightmare. I was afraid. My husband had to intervene before he could run.”

For several months, the captain paid to vaccinate as many dogs as possible. “But anyway the dog catcher came and killed it,” she said. “It’s more wilder than you could imagine. I won’t sleep anymore.”

A spokesman for Casa Baia, who reached CNN, declined to comment on the accusations of killing stray dogs or using inhumane methods to catch them.

FIFA has been recognizing Moroccan dog culling since at least 2023. That March, the European Links Union (ELC), a UK-based NGO, met with senior FIFA officials to present evidence of Culling’s rise ahead of the 2030 World Cup. The material included dozens of photographs, videos and witness testimony. Some refer directly to Casabia.

In April 2024, FIFA Human Rights Advisor Marta Piazza told ELC that the organization was involved in “really assessing” their views and “encouraging alignment with FIFA bidding requirements” with the Moroccan government.

A “suggested method” has been promised over the next few weeks.

According to the ELC, FIFA was silent. The organization says it hasn’t heard from the square or her colleagues since. In response to CNN’s request for comment, FIFA said it was “in contact with animal welfare groups on this important issue.”

The Moroccan government is taking steps to regulate dog culling habits.

Last month, Roudani and his colleagues submitted a draft law that would halt the killing of stray animals and require municipalities to implement the TNVR program.

In a statement to CNN, FIFA contacted the Moroccan Football Federation and said it had “confirmed that many measures have been implemented over the past five years,” citing a new law for the work aimed at balancing public health and animal welfare.

The issue has attracted global attention ahead of the 2030 World Cup, with celebrities such as Ricky Gelweiss and Peter Egan denounce the murder of X and calling it a “massacre.”

“Soccer fans all over the world love dogs,” Minky Wardon of Human Rights Watch told CNN. “If FIFA doesn’t take concrete action, animal abuse can become a major PR issue.”

“It’s not just an animal abuse issue,” added Nick McGeehan, co-director of rights group Fairsquare. “You have clear knowledge of the problem and choose to ignore them. It’s a violation of basic human common sense.”