Lead and Cadmium Could Be in Your Dark Chocolate – How Lead and Cadmium Get Into Dark Chocolate

consumerreport.org

Consumer Reports found dangerous heavy metals in chocolate from Hershey’s, Theo, Trader Joe’s, and other popular brands. Here are the ones that had the most, and some that are safer.

Lead and Cadmium element symbols on pieces of dark chocolate.

December 15, 2022 By Kevin Loria Data visualizations by Andy Bergmann

For many of us, chocolate is more than just a tasty treat. It’s a mood lifter, an energy booster, a reward after a tough day, a favorite holiday gift. 

People also choose dark chocolate in particular for its potential health benefits, thanks to studies that suggest its rich supply of antioxidants may improve heart health and other conditions, and for its relatively low levels of sugar. In fact, more than half of people in a recent survey from the National Confectioners Association described dark chocolate as a “better for you” candy.

But there’s a dark side to this “healthier” chocolate. Research has found that some dark chocolate bars contain cadmium and lead—two heavy metals linked to a host of health problems in children and adults. 

The chocolate industry has been grappling with ways to lower those levels. To see how much of a risk these favorite treats pose, Consumer Reports scientists recently measured the amount of heavy metals in 28 dark chocolate bars. They detected cadmium and lead in all of them.

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Rare Earth Prices Skyrocket Following Burmese Mining Suspension

OILPRICE.COM By Metal Miner – Oct 08, 2023, 10:00 AM CDT

  • Myanmar’s Kachin State, supplying 38% of China’s rare earth imports, halted mining, causing an immediate spike in global prices.
  • The long-term effects of this suspension might lead to scarcity, illicit mining, and environmental issues in the region.
  • China’s economic slowdown combined with geopolitical risks highlights the need for diversified sourcing in the rare earth market.

The Rare Earths MMI (Monthly Metals Index) witnessed yet another steep increase month-over-month. Indeed, supply disruptions remain a massive concern in the rare earths industry, so rare earth magnets and other materials witnessed renewed bullish strength across the board over recent months.

https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/core/bridge3.595.0_en.html#goog_2062367381

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Beijing to host global gathering as Xi Jinping lays out China’s vision

Chinese leader Xi Jinping speaks at the China-Central Asia Summit held this past May in Xi'an.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping speaks at the China-Central Asia Summit held this past May in Xi’an.Huang Jingwen/Xinhua/Getty Images

BeijingCNN — Chinese leader Xi Jinping is gathering world leaders in Beijing this week for a high profile forum with a clear set of goals: laud China’s role backing economic development over the past decade and project its expanding ambitions as an alternative global leader to the United States.

That bid takes on heightened significance as renewed conflict in Israel and Gaza threatens to trigger broader instability in the Middle East, a region where the US is the traditional power broker, but China has been growing its influence and efforts to play a role in peace.

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Lớp khiêu vũ cho người khiếm thị, người khuyết tật tại TPHCM

laodong.vn 06-10-2023 – 19:45

(NLĐO) – Đối tượng tham gia lớp học khiêu vũ không chỉ riêng người khiếm thị mà tất cả những người khuyết tật đều có thể tham gia và hoàn toàn miễn học phí

Lớp khiêu vũthể thao cho người khiếm thị được tổ chức bởi Hiệp hội Paralympic Việt Nam, Liên đoàn Thể dục Việt Nam và Sở Văn hóa và Thể thao TP HCM cùng sự đồng hành của dự án phi lợi nhuận Solar Dance Clup khiêu vũ dành cho người khiếm thị.

Lớp học hiện đang diễn ra tại Trung tâm Huấn luyện và thi đấu thể dục thể thao TP HCM trong khung giờ 8 đến 11 giờ 30 và 14 đến 17 giờ 30 từ ngày 6 đến 8-10. Đối tượng tham gia lớp học này không chỉ riêng người khiếm thị mà tất cả những người khuyết tật đều có thể tham gia và hoàn toàn miễn học phí.

Lớp khiêu vũ đặc biệt tại TP HCM - Ảnh 2.

Bà Trần Mai Thúy Hồng, Phó trưởng Phòng Quản lý Thể dục thể thao Sở Văn hóa và Thể thao TP HCM, chia sẻ: “Nhằm tạo thêm sân chơi qua những môn thể thao mới, phù hợp với nhiều đối tượng người khuyết tật để họ rèn luyện sức khỏe và có cơ hội tham gia các giải thể thao quốc tế”.

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U.S. students are clashing over the Israel-Hamas war. What can colleges do?

npr.org October 14, 20235:00 AM ETLISTEN· 4:53

AYESHA RASCOE, HOST:

Tensions over Israel’s war with Hamas have extended all the way to college campuses in the U.S. There have been protests and strong statements and, at times, physical and verbal clashes. What are colleges supposed to do in these moments? To answer that question and tell us about what has been happening, we turn to NPR’s Elissa Nadworny. Hi, Elissa.

ELISSA NADWORNY, BYLINE: Hi, Ayesha.

RASCOE: So walk us through the week. How has this played out at colleges?

NADWORNY: Let’s first go to Harvard. So there, last weekend, a coalition of student groups issued a statement saying they, quote, “hold the Israeli regime entirely responsible for the unfolding violence.” Now, this statement was met with a lot of anger, pushback and pressure. And since then, some of the student groups have apologized or retracted their endorsements. Across the country, there have been vigils and protests on campus. At Indiana University, the student newspaper reported clashes between pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian student groups. And even before the Hamas attack, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been one of the most contentious issues on campus.

RASCOE: And how are the administrations of these universities reacting to all of this turmoil?

NADWORNY: We’ve seen quite a range of responses. The University of Florida president, Ben Sasse, a former Republican senator, came out and said, quote, “we’ll protect our Jewish students from violence.” We’ve also seen other schools, like Vanderbilt and University of Virginia, issue multiple statements, you know? They just can’t quite get it right. I talked with Eboo Patel about this. He’s the president of Interfaith America, which works with campuses around conflict issues.

EBOO PATEL: I got a phone call from a college president this morning telling me that his campus would be hosting a peace vigil, and he was concerned about a disturbance at that peace vigil possibly approaching violence.

NADWORNY: Patel told that campus leader and others, keep your message super clear and simple. Say, look, people are hurting. We care and support our students, and we will be a community of cooperation.

PATEL: We’re not going to minimize the conflict. We are simply going to say that we are not going to allow the conflict to prevent us from cooperating on other things. That’s the genius of American college campuses.

RASCOE: What about schools that have remained quiet, which – I mean, that can feel like a statement in and of itself?

NADWORNY: That’s right. Yeah. You know, surprisingly, some free speech advocates actually like this approach, though they acknowledge it will come with pushback. Here’s Alex Morey, she’s the director of campus rights advocacy at FIRE, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.

ALEX MOREY: The commentary is so divisive, and there’s really no right answer for a university. So what is so much better, but unpopular at the moment, for universities to do is to remove themselves from the debate entirely and instead say, we are not going to put our thumb on the scale as the university, one way or another, because that will chill the environment for free expression for scholarly inquiry.

RASCOE: Elissa, I’m guessing that many students right now are feeling like they are in the middle of all of this.

NADWORNY: Yeah. Many students are frustrated both about what student groups are saying and, in some cases, what universities aren’t saying. Here’s Caroline Yaffa. She’s a senior at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.

CAROLINE YAFFA: I think it’s the university’s obligation to weigh in on this.

NADWORNY: Yaffa is Jewish, and she told NPR’s Rachel Treisman that she has had moments this week where she doesn’t feel safe on campus. She even changed her name on her Uber account from Yaffa to Smith.

RASCOE: And what about students who have organized pro-Palestine protests or are part of student groups that support Palestine?

YAFFA: Well, the National Organization of Students for Justice in Palestine told NPR that they expect universities to defend and protect a student’s right to speak, assemble and protest. Some students who are part of local chapters didn’t want to talk on the record for fear of retaliation. But I talked with Radhika Sainath, a senior staff attorney at Palestine Legal, an advocacy group that focuses on academic freedom.

RADHIKA SAINATH: So many people have been coming to us as well who just have basic questions of saying, you know, can I say that I support Palestinian rights? Can I say that I stand against Israeli military occupation or for Palestinian freedom? Am I allowed to do this at my university?

NADWORNY: She said she’s heard from professors that say their social media posts are being questioned. Students say they’re facing harassment or doxing, where their names and addresses get released online. And Sainath tells them, look, the First Amendment right in the United States protects speech, even if it’s controversial.

RASCOE: That’s Elissa Nadworny from NPR’s education team. Thank you so much for joining us.

NADWORNY: Thanks, Ayesha.

Nelson Mandela Speaking on Palestine [Extracts]

The above video is a collection of extracts from a 1990 town hall meeting, held in New York City and chaired by Ted Koppel of ABC Networks. The meeting formed part Nelson Mandela’s first visit to the USA immediately following his release from prison.

A significant part of the town hall meeting focused on Nelson Mandela’s advocating (on behalf of the African National Congress and the larger South African liberation struggle) for sanctions to be applied against Apartheid South Africa, his and the ANC’s support for the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) as well as his close friendship with Yasser Arafat (of Palestine) and Fidel Castro (of Cuba).

The town hall meeting took place in 1990, long before the world had embraced Nelson Mandela as a “giant of justice”. However, even then, when it may have been unfashionable and unpopular to support the Palestinians against, what Mandela termed, Israeli “colonialism”, Mandela stood firm and resolute on his principles and the policies of the ANC – Mandela was, after all, conveying the long-standing positions held by the ANC and the larger South African liberation movement.

Nelson Mandela supported the Palestinian struggle when it was unfashionable and unpopular, he was a true leader. Hamba Kahle Tata…

Sạt lở đất – Thiên tai hay nhân tai?

Phóng sự VTV24 năm 2020

[VOV2] – Các hoạt động nhân sinh đang làm trầm trọng thêm các hình thái bất thường của thời tiết và đã đến lúc không thể chỉ nói rằng thảm hoạ xảy ra là do thiên tai, mà trong nhiều trường hợp cần phải nói đến là do cả nhân tai.

Chỉ trong vòng hơn 2 tháng qua, cả nước đã xảy ra 47 trận sạt lở đất, đá gây thiệt hại nghiêm trọng về người và tài sản. Điều đáng nói, không chỉ khu vực Tây Nguyên, Nam Bộ, Tây Bắc, mà ngay cả Hà Nội cũng đã xuất hiện những trận sạt lở lớn. Vậy đâu là nguyên nhân gây ra tình trạng này? Cần có những giải pháp hữu hiệu nào để phòng tránh những vụ sạt lở tương tự?

Trong cuộc trao đổi với phóng viên VOV2, PGS.TS Trần Tân Văn, nguyên Viện trưởng Viện Khoa học địa chất và khoáng sản Việt Nam, Bộ Tài nguyên và Môi trường đã có những nhận định và phân tích khá thẳng thắn xung quanh vấn đề này.

PGS.TS Trần Tân Văn, nguyên Viện trưởng Viện Khoa học địa chất và khoáng sản Việt Nam, Bộ Tài nguyên và Môi trường
PGS.TS Trần Tân Văn, nguyên Viện trưởng Viện Khoa học địa chất và khoáng sản Việt Nam, Bộ Tài nguyên và Môi trường
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Miền Trung đứng trước nguy cơ “đại hồng thuỷ” sau gần 25 năm

Kinh tế đô thị  Trọng Tùng 14:37 15/10/2023

Kinhtedothi – Miền Trung đang ở hình thế kinh điển (điển hình) của mùa mưa, rất giống với hình thái thời tiết từng gây ra trận lũ lụt lịch sử vào tháng 11/1999. Liệu một trận đại hồng thuỷ có lặp lại sau gần 25 năm?

TIN LIÊN QUAN

Gần 1.600 ngôi nhà bị ngập, sơ tán hơn 3.900 người dân tránh mưa lũ

Miền Trung chìm trong mưa lũ

Ký ức khó phai mờ

Đợt lũ lụt xảy ra tại miền Trung vào tháng 11/1999 (hay còn được biết đến với tên gọi là đại hồng thủy 1999) được xem là một trong những trận lũ lụt lớn nhất từng xảy ra. Nguyên nhân của trận lũ lụt lịch sử là do tác động của không khí lạnh mạnh kết hợp với dải áp thấp xích đạo, các nhiễu động trên cao và cuối cùng là áp thấp nhiệt đới.

Các tỉnh miền Trung nước ta đã phải hứng chịu những trận mưa rất lớn từ ngày 1 – 6/11/1999, gây ra lũ lụt nghiêm trọng, nhấn chìm nhiều huyện, thị xã, làm thiệt hại tài sản lên đến gần 3.800 tỷ đồng (giá thời điểm năm 1999, tương đương 21.203 tỷ đồng ở năm 2023).

Gia cố bờ sông phòng, chống lũ lên do mưa lớn kéo dài tại tỉnh Hà Tĩnh.
Gia cố bờ sông phòng, chống lũ lên do mưa lớn kéo dài tại tỉnh Hà Tĩnh.
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International humanitarian law (Wiki)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Not to be confused with International human rights law.

International humanitarian law
Courts and Tribunals
Nuremberg trialsInternational Military Tribunal for the Far EastInternational Criminal Tribunal for the former YugoslaviaInternational Criminal Tribunal for RwandaInternational Court of JusticeInternational Criminal Court
Violations
War crimes
Treaties
Hague ConventionsGeneva ConventionsThird Geneva ConventionFourth Geneva ConventionProtocol IProtocol IIProtocol IIIRome Statute
Related areas of law
Law of war (jus ad bellum)International human rights lawInternational criminal law
vte

International humanitarian law (IHL), also referred to as the laws of armed conflict, is the law that regulates the conduct of war (jus in bello).[1][2] It is a branch of international law that seeks to limit the effects of armed conflict by protecting persons who are not participating in hostilities and by restricting and regulating the means and methods of warfare available to combatants.

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Australia rejects Indigenous referendum in setback for reconciliation

Reuters.com By Praveen Menon, Lewis Jackson, Wayne Cole

https://www.reuters.com/video/?videoId=RW001014102023RP1&jwsource=em

SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australia on Saturday decisively rejected a proposal to recognise Indigenous people in the constitution, in a major setback to the country’s efforts for reconciliation with its First Peoples.

Australians had to vote “Yes” or “No” in the referendum, the first in almost a quarter of a century, on the question of whether to alter the constitution to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island people through the creation of an Indigenous advisory body, the “Voice to Parliament”.

Nationwide, with almost 70% of the vote counted, the “No” vote led “Yes” 60% to 40%. Australian broadcaster ABC and other TV networks have projected that a majority of voters in all six of Australia’s states would vote against altering the 122-year-old constitution.

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Timeline: Indigenous Voice, treaty and truth in Australia

Aljazeera.com

Indigenous people’s 60,000 years of connection to their country should be recognised, leaders say.

An Aboriginal protester runs past a fire and make-shift shelter with an Aboriginal flag outside the old parliament House building in Canberra
The Aboriginal Tent Embassy has been a continued site of protest outside old Parliament House in Australia’s Canberra since 1972 [File: David Gray/Reuters]

By Al Jazeera Staff

Published On 13 Oct 202313 Oct 2023

The Australian referendum on an Indigenous Voice to Parliament is part of a long history of Aboriginal people fighting for their voice to be heard.

The referendum was called after Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander leaders issued the Uluru Statement from the Heart, a petition calling for a First Nations Voice to be enshrined in the Australian constitution.

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Explainer: Australia has voted against an Indigenous Voice to Parliament. Here’s what happened

theconversation.com

A majority of Australian voters have rejected the proposal to establish an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice to Parliament, with the final results likely to be about 40% voting “yes” and 60% voting “no”.

What was the referendum about?

In this referendum, Australians were asked to vote on whether to establish an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice to Parliament. The Voice was proposed as a means of recognising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Peoples of Australia in the Constitution.

The Voice proposal was a modest one. It was to be an advisory body for the national parliament and government. Had the referendum succeeded, Australia’s Constitution would have been amended with a new section 129:

In recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Peoples of Australia:

i. there shall be a body, to be called the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice

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Experts say Hamas and Israel are committing war crimes in their fight

Israeli soldiers inspect the site of a music festival near the border with the Gaza Strip in southern Israel, Friday. Oct. 13, 2023. At least 260 Israeli festival-goers were killed during the attack by Hamas gunmen last Saturday. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

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Israeli soldiers inspect the site of a music festival near the border with the Gaza Strip in southern Israel, Friday. Oct. 13, 2023. At least 260 Israeli festival-goers were killed during the attack by Hamas gunmen last Saturday. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)Read More

Israeli tanks head towards the Gaza Strip border in southern Israel on Friday, Oct.13, 2023. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

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Israeli tanks head towards the Gaza Strip border in southern Israel on Friday, Oct.13, 2023. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)Read More

Palestinians evacuate wounded people after an Israeli airstrike in Rafah refugee camp, southern Gaza Strip, Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023. As Israel escalates its war on Hamas, it will confront many of the same dilemmas it has grappled with over decades of conflict with the Palestinians. It will want to punish Hamas like never before, but without killing so many Palestinian civilians that it loses international support. (AP Photo/Hatem Ali)

3 of 4 | 

Palestinians evacuate wounded people after an Israeli airstrike in Rafah refugee camp, southern Gaza Strip, Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023. As Israel escalates its war on Hamas, it will confront many of the same dilemmas it has grappled with over decades of conflict with the Palestinians. It will want to punish Hamas like never before, but without killing so many Palestinian civilians that it loses international support. (AP Photo/Hatem Ali)Read More

Palestinians inspect the rubble of buildings hit by an Israeli airstrike at Al Shati Refugee Camp Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023. As Israel escalates its war on Hamas, it will confront many of the same dilemmas it has grappled with over decades of conflict with the Palestinians. It will want to punish Hamas like never before, but without killing so many Palestinian civilians that it loses international support. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)

4 of 4 | 

Palestinians inspect the rubble of buildings hit by an Israeli airstrike at Al Shati Refugee Camp Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023. As Israel escalates its war on Hamas, it will confront many of the same dilemmas it has grappled with over decades of conflict with the Palestinians. It will want to punish Hamas like never before, but without killing so many Palestinian civilians that it loses international support. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)Read More

BY MIKE CORDER AND JULIA FRANKEL APnews

Updated 3:14 AM GMT+7, October 14, 2023

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — The deadly attacks by Hamas on Israeli civilians and the devastating Israeli airstrikes and blockade of Gaza have raised accusations among international legal experts that both sides were violating international law.

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