Wherever you may be on Earth, the equinox brings us several seasonal effects which have been noticeable to nature lovers around the globe for years. The word ‘equinox’ originates from two Latin words: ‘aequus’ meaning equal and ‘nox’ meaning night. The literal meaning is ‘equal night.’ Our ancestors, who had far less precise timekeeping than we do, believed that night and day were equal. But today we know this is not true.
People have been celebrating the March Equinox for centuries and since it is associated with spring the festivals tend to celebrate fertility and agriculture. The Romans used this day to celebrate their goddess Cybele who has driven around in a chariot drawn by lions. Ancient Persia in roughly 550 B.C., celebrated the vernal equinox as Nowruz, their New Year. Modern Iranians still celebrate this time as their New Year. During the era of the Shang Dynasty, which ruled China from 1600 to 1046 B.C., it was believed that the spring equinox marked a mythic beginning, a type of ‘start of their line.’ Jews in the 12th Century believed that the spring equinox marked the day in the year in which the Biblical plague that turned Egypt’s water into blood occurred.
The festival of ‘Holi’ is the March equinox festival in India. This is celebrated in honor of various Hindu deities and legends. It signals the triumph of Good vs Evil, the most notable being the legend of Krishna and Rhada. Ancient cultures had great awareness of nature, the seasons, and the movement of the celestial bodies. Many built sites that had a glaringly obvious use: that of a calendar. These were often aligned to display shafts of sunlight during solstices and equinoxes. Examples of these are Chichen Itza in Mexico, Mnajdra Temples in Malta, and Stonehenge in England.
MARCH EQUINOX ACTIVITIES
Spring Clean The March equinox is the perfect time to give your house an overhaul. Start by decluttering your house.
Do some gardening Growth symbolizes triumph over death and being reborn therefore it has become a tradition to plant seeds at this time of the year. Add some colorful flowers to your garden to celebrate spring.
Visit ancient sites Various ancient sites are linked to March equinox celebrations and traditions. Pack a bag, call a friend or two and set out on an adventure.
5 FACTS ABOUT THE MARCH EQUINOX
The sun rises and sets the fastest The fastest sunsets and sunrises occur during this time of the year.
Spring occurs on two different days There are two different calendars: the astronomical and the meteorological calendar. If we go by the astronomical calendar, spring will fall on March 20 but if we go by the other, spring will occur on March 1.
It’s Mother’s day In Arab countries, Mother’s Day is often observed on the March equinox.
It marks the middle of Spring In East Asian countries the March equinox marks the halfway point of spring.
It signals the start of a festival Boatyard employees and sailboat owners in the U.S hold the Burning of the Socks festival where socks are burnt to celebrate the warmer weather.
WHY WE LOVE MARCH EQUINOX
It is celebrated around the world The March equinox is celebrated by many cultures around the world. We love that it has a unifying factor.
It signals new beginnings The March equinox symbolizes growth and new beginnings. It is a clear marker of the change from winter to spring.
Days are longer Along with longer days, the weather starts to warm up as well. Nature reflects this change with the blooming of new flowers and plants.
There is occasional debate as to whether flannel sheets and down comforters/wool blankets are changed to cotton sheets and blankets on the Equinox or the Monday after Easter.
For those whom may be grocery shopping this weekend and thinking of purchasing eggs, here is some information on current pricing.
I would ask that you raise your hand if this would be applicable to you; however, my feeling is the vast majority of you are significantly better at the password remember thing than am I.
Today is an another egg art offering; however, I pilfered it from WhyNot.
The Pentagon Keeps Losing Equipment and Buying Stuff It Doesn’t Need
MatthewPetti February Issue of Reason Magazine
Summary
The article describes the U.S. military’s tendency to lose equipment and buy unnecessary items. It highlights the wasteful spending on the F-35 fighter jet spare parts and the 7.12 billion in equipment left behind in Afghanistan. The article also criticizes the military’s tendency to prioritize short-term gains over long-term strategic planning. Table of Contents
How the U.S. military busts its budget on wasteful, careless, and unnecessary ‘self-licking ice cream cones.’
(Illustrations: Mladjana P./Fiverr)
Keeping track of inventory is hard for any large organization. Workers misplace items, administrators fill out the wrong paperwork, and things just go missing. But losing $85 million in inventory? That’s a job for the U.S. military.
In 2023, the Government Accountability Office revealed that a government contractor had lost 2 million spare parts for the F-35 fighter jet, together worth tens of millions of dollars, since 2018. The Department of Defense followed up on only 20,000 of those parts. Military officials don’t know how many F-35 spare parts exist in total, paid for by American taxpayers but spread out at contractor warehouses around the world.
The F-35 spare parts debacle is just one part of a budget-busting pattern of inventory failures. In 2018, the U.S. Navy found a warehouse in Jacksonville, Florida, full of parts for the F-14 Tomcat, the now-obsolete fighter jet made famous in Top Gun, and for the P-8 Poseidon and P-3 Orion, two submarine-hunting aircraft. The parts were worth $126 million. Had Navy auditors not found them, taxpayers might have ended up paying twice for the same part.
“Not only did we not know that the parts existed, we didn’t even know the warehouse existed,” then–Secretary of the Navy Thomas Modly told reporters the following year. “When they brought those parts into the inventory system, within a couple of weeks there were like $20 million in requisitions on those parts for aircraft that were down because we didn’t know we had the parts of the inventory.”
The 1985 aircraft carrier scandal continued this pattern of failure to keep track of valuable materiel. After a group of smugglers was caught stealing F-14 parts to sell to Iran, the Pentagon ran an audit on the spare parts stored on aircraft carriers. Auditors found the Navy had lost track of $394 million in parts between 1984 and 1985. Not to worry! It turns out only about $7 million in parts had been stolen by the gunrunners, and the remaining $387 million were misidentified or misplaced.
Some of these losses are simple bureaucratic inefficiency. “It’s a good example of the right hand not knowing what the left hand is doing,” says Scott Amey, a lawyer for the nonprofit Project on Government Oversight. In other cases, the government and contractors don’t seem to even want to keep good track of their inventory. “Sometimes it’s easier to just buy something, especially near the end of the fiscal year in August or September, to drive the budget up than to use something that you already have,” Amey adds.
Military Spending as a Stand-Alone Strategy
In addition to losing or misplacing expensive parts, the Army has been letting them go bad, according to a March 2024 report by the Pentagon’s Office of Inspector General. When inspectors visited warehouses for tanks and other armored vehicles in 2022 and 2023, they found $1.31 billion of equipment in “critical” condition. Tank treads were strewn about on the grass. Transmissions were sitting outside in the humid air. A group of engines was visibly rusted, and a manager was “unsure whether any of the engines were in a condition that they could still be repaired.”
“This world in arms is not spending money alone,” then–President Dwight D. Eisenhower famously said in 1953. “It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children.” Some of that sweat doesn’t even turn into usable guns, warships, and rockets. Much of it flows into the pockets of military contractors, who overcharge and underdeliver. Or it disappears into thin air, left to rot in a warehouse until it is unceremoniously disposed of. Sometimes Congress even forces the armed services to keep maintaining gear they don’t want.
Between dysfunctional bureaucracy and bad incentives, a lot of military spending is simply wasted.
“We have a defense budget that is disconnected from a coherent grand strategy,” says Dan Caldwell, a public policy adviser at Defense Priorities, a nonprofit that advocates a more restrained military policy. “A lot of policymakers and a lot of individuals in the national security think tank community think that a topline spending number—whether it’s a total spending number or a percentage of GDP—they think that in and of itself is a strategy.”
Whether or not the United States needs more military power, you can’t count on getting that power just by throwing more money into the Pentagon. Manufacturers are facing bottlenecks in the production of key munitions, which are being burned up in Ukraine and the Middle East faster than they can be replaced. These bottlenecks are related to shortages of labor and physical resources that money can’t solve.
Pouring more cash into the military budget may be like pumping water into a clogged pipe. Instead of getting through, the fluid leaks out of places it shouldn’t. While the U.S. military runs short of weapons it would actually need to win a war, the Pentagon has found itself buying things it doesn’t need.
The Defense Department has infamously failed every single audit Congress has ever mandated for it. Nobody even knows where all of the money is going. All the while, officials continue to insist they’re making progress. “We keep getting better and better at it,” deputy Pentagon press secretary Sabrina Singh said at a 2023 news conference, after the sixth failed audit.
The Afghanistan Spending Quagmire
Perhaps the most infamous cases of waste occurred in Afghanistan, where the United States spent 20 years trying to prop up a friendly Afghan government only to have Taliban rebels sweep the capital in a lightning-quick August 2021 offensive. Although the U.S. military extracted all of its own gear, it left $7.12 billion of American-provided equipment with the doomed Afghan army; it soon fell into the Taliban’s hands. Images of Taliban fighters riding around with captured vehicles became a symbol of American failure.
But even before the Taliban takeover, the U.S. Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), a watchdog created in 2008, had spent years documenting the incompetence and disorganization of the war effort. In February 2021, as U.S. forces were working on pulling out of the country, SIGAR released a damning summary of its findings.
Out of the $7.8 billion in U.S.-funded “capital assets” that SIGAR reviewed, $2.4 billion were either abandoned, misused, or falling apart. The majority of these projects had been funded by the Defense Department, with smaller contributions from the U.S. Agency for International Development, the State Department, and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, a government agency that encourages American investment in developing countries.
In other words, even if the United States had won the war, a huge portion of the money spent on the war would not have made any difference for victory.
For example, the military spent $25 million for a new headquarters in Helmand, Afghanistan—and kept construction going even after U.S. troops were leaving the province.
In 2009, then-President Barack Obama announced a surge of troops across Afghanistan, including 11,000 Marines sent to Helmand. Although the surge was supposed to be a temporary measure, with the Marines scheduled to leave Helmand in July 2011, “the military quietly assumed troop strengths would be maintained for five years and had master plans for 10,” ProPublica later reported.
Pentagon planners designed a state-of-the-art headquarters for U.S. forces in Helmand, nicknamed “64k” because it was 64,000 square feet. The completion date was set for January 2012, after the Marines were supposed to leave.
Commanders on the ground realized what a waste 64k would be. Two Army generals and a Marine general all requested permission to stop construction, arguing the current plywood headquarters in Helmand was just fine. They were rebuffed by Maj. Gen. Peter Vangjel, then the deputy commander of Army forces in the Middle East and Central Asia. He wasn’t thinking of military needs—just the military budget. Congress had budgeted money for 64k, and getting permission to do something else with the cash would require congressional approval, so “reprogramming it for a later year is not prudent,” Vangjel wrote in a memo, later published in a SIGAR report.
The military broke ground for 64k in May 2011, only a few months before the troops were scheduled to leave. Construction continued, over budget and behind schedule, as the Marine base emptied out. In April 2013, the building was completed—and the Marines decided not to use it. When SIGAR inspectors visited a few months later, they found a fancy, empty building. The furniture still had plastic wrap all over it.
“They did end up building a great building. It just wasn’t the right size and scope,” says a federal oversight official familiar with the project, who spoke to Reason on condition of anonymity.
The 64k building became a symbol of the war’s economic wastefulness. “A number of generals came up to me the last time I was in Afghanistan and said ‘Please, look at this,’” said SIGAR head John F. Sopko in a 2013 interview with C-SPAN. “This is indicative of the problem of military construction. Once it starts, it never stops.”
The worst return on investment came from aircraft. The Defense Department purchased 20 used Italian transport planes for the Afghan army in 2008, at a cost of $549 million. Soon after, Afghan air crews discovered severe issues with the aircrafts’ maintenance and performance. The U.S. military flew four of the planes back to Europe and sold the remaining 16 for scrap in Afghanistan, earning back just $40,257.
The problems with this deal should have been obvious from the beginning. Alenia, the company that sold the used planes, claimed to have warehouses full of spare parts, but no one was able to verify the contents, an official told SIGAR. The planes themselves had nasty-looking corrosion—or “exfoliation,” as the Air Force put it—on their wings.
An official from the State Department told the military to “run as far away from Alenia as you possibly can,” according to a SIGAR follow-up report. The military went ahead with the contract anyway. The problem, again, was the use-it-or-lose-it nature of the military budget. The fiscal year was ending in September 2008, and any funds for the planes that weren’t spent would expire. “Due to the compressed time schedule to get the contract awarded, a lot of details were ‘taken on faith’” from Alenia, an official later told SIGAR.
One of the Air Force officials involved in the debacle later went on to work for Alenia, which SIGAR called a “clear conflict of interest.” (The FBI worked with SIGAR and other agencies to investigate Alenia and the Air Force official. The Justice Department declined to prosecute the case.) The Defense Department denied SIGAR’s conclusions, claiming the planes were rushed to meet “an urgent operational requirement” for the Afghan army.
Another problem with military spending in Afghanistan was a tendency to ignore local needs. “A lot of times, it was not taking the local context into account,” the federal oversight official says. “You hear what you want to hear, not necessarily what was said.”
The Little Crappy Ship
Like foreign military advisers foisting equipment on Afghan troops the Afghans neither needed nor could use, Congress has pushed the U.S. military to take on more equipment than it asks for. For the past several years, the Navy has asked for funds for a certain number of ships—and Congress has budgeted an even larger number. In March 2024, the Senate Appropriations Committee bragged that it gave the Navy $732 million more in shipbuilding money than it requested.
Littoral combat ships have been a particular fiasco. In the early 2000s, the Navy promised to create small, fast-moving warships that could easily be retrofitted for different kinds of missions in coastal waters. Admiral Vernon Clark, the spiritual father of the project, compared his vision to a space fighter from Star Wars “that’s got R2-D2 in it.” Instead, the final results were nicknamed the “Little Crappy Ship.”
Originally estimated to cost $220 million each, the ships ended up costing half a billion dollars apiece—and couldn’t even sail right. The gears on the engine transmission were flawed, causing ships to stall in the water. (One of them, the USS Milwaukee, broke down on its way out of the shipyard in 2015.) Lockheed Martin, the ship’s manufacturer, spent years haggling over the cost of overhauling the transmission.
Nor was the littoral combat ship very good at fighting. Putting it more delicately, a Pentagon report said the ships would be “challenged in a contested environment.”
The Navy spent 15 years and $700 million trying to build a minisubmarine that could be towed behind the littoral combat ship to find naval mines, then abandoned the project. Similarly, the littoral combat ship was supposed to have a towed sonar probe to find submarines, but the ship’s engines were so loud it drowned out the sonar signals. That technology, too, was shelved.
Instead of a ship that could have its weapons swapped out like Lego bricks at a moment’s notice, as the admirals had imagined, the Navy ended up with a ship that wasn’t very good at anything. It decided to cut its losses. In 2017, the Pentagon requested funding for just one more littoral combat ship, after which the shipyards would be closed down. The Navy would begin developing a new frigate, the Constellation class, instead.
But there was too much contractor money—and too many contractor jobs—tied up in the Little Crappy Ship. Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D–Wis.) wrote a letter to President Donald Trump protesting that 1,850 shipyard workers in Wisconsin risked being laid off. She emphasized her and Trump’s “shared goals” to “revitalize American manufacturing, strengthen the defense industrial base, and preserve American jobs, especially in the Midwest.”
Those concerns swayed the Trump administration, which edited the Navy budget to add a second $500 million ship. “Maintaining the industrial base was really the sole consideration,” a source toldDefense News. It didn’t matter whether the money was buying usable equipment. What mattered was the factories kept running.
“That’s like saying you need to keep eating junk food so maybe one day you can eat vegetables. It’s an absurd argument,” argues Caldwell of Defense Priorities. “The people that work in shipyards, and the capacity, the tools, the equipment—there is high demand for all that stuff. If they weren’t building the LCS, there would still be work for them to do.”
In 2020, the Navy signed a contract with Fincantieri Marinette Marine, the manufacturer of the littoral combat ship, for a new Constellation-class frigate. Then the military brass started trying to retire the littoral combat ship, a decade ahead of schedule. Keeping the ships would have made the whole project even more wasteful. The Navy estimated in 2022 it would cost $4.3 billion to bring littoral combat ships up to speed, not counting the cost of a new antisubmarine system.
Admiral John Gumbleton asked reporters to think about the opportunity cost, since the resources for maintaining littoral combat ships could have gone into the new frigates. “We need a capable lethal-ready Navy more than we need a larger Navy that’s less capable, less lethal, and less ready,” then–Chief of Naval Operations Michael Gilday told a congressional committee.
Again, members of Congress from shipbuilding states wouldn’t have that. Rep. John Rutherford (R–Fla.) took calls from military contractors and meetings with Florida officials, then introduced an amendment forbidding the Navy from retiring any littoral combat ships early. After a bit of haggling, Congress reluctantly allowed the Navy to decommission four littoral combat ships out of the nine that were originally chosen for early retirement.
The USS Milwaukee was retired in September 2023, fewer than 10 years after its failed maiden voyage. It had deployed twice to patrol the Caribbean Sea. The Navy held a small ceremony to celebrate the Milwaukee‘s achievements over its life span: Seizing $30 million of “suspected cocaine” and arresting three suspected smugglers. That same month, the USS Little Rock was decommissioned after less than six years of service. That ship had seized $127 million of cocaine.
“Every problem with our defense budget ultimately flows from the fact that we are trying to pursue an American grand strategy of primacy in a world where we are facing increasing constraints,” says Caldwell. “That ultimately leads us to try and build weapon systems like the [littoral combat ship] that try to either do too much or too little and are not suited to the real threats that we face.”
He adds that the military contractors are the primary “political constituency in parts of the country,” leading to a “self-licking ice cream cone.”
In other words, one reason the United States government won’t give up trying to dominate the entire world is because cutting military contractor jobs is just bad politics. American politicians use preparations for war as a jobs program. Those goals have forced the military to act as jack of all trades, master of none. Those bad political incentives are hurting genuine military readiness.
No one begrudges our military having those things needed to meet a state of readiness. We should have a major issue with waste and management that is totally unable to pass a required audit.
Chocolate has a long history and was used widely across pre-Columbian America since the ancient Central Americans established a thriving culture and grew different crops. Through contact with the European explorers, chocolate found its way to Europe and eventually to the rest of the world. The early European settlers began making candies in their homes in the latter decades of the 17th century. The earlier forms of these candies were made simply with water and sugar derived from beetroot juice. Later, fat and milk were added to produce the rich and creamy texture of caramel. Thus, the invention of chocolate caramel seems to have been an event just waiting for the two civilizations on different sides of the Atlantic to come together.
It was only a matter of time before some genius mind would come up with the idea of combining the two. That lucky person was Milton Hershey. Today, the name ‘Hershey’s’ is synonymous with quality chocolate products, but few know the brain behind this company who singlehandedly made chocolate caramel famous throughout the United States.
During the 1800s, when all major candy manufacturers in America were making traditional hard candies, Milton Hershey’s Lancaster Caramel Company was one of the few companies that focused on making chocolate-covered caramels instead of hard candies. But it was in 1893 when these chocolate-covered caramels really became popular. Hershey was so greatly influenced by the machines used by the Germans for making chocolate bars that he adapted the same technology and started mass producing caramel-covered chocolates.
HISTORY OF NATIONAL CHOCOLATE CARAMEL DAY
Chocolate has a long history and was used widely across pre-Columbian America since the ancient Central Americans established a thriving culture and grew different crops. Through contact with the European explorers, chocolate found its way to Europe and eventually to the rest of the world. The early European settlers began making candies in their homes in the latter decades of the 17th century. The earlier forms of these candies were made simply with water and sugar derived from beetroot juice. Later, fat and milk were added to produce the rich and creamy texture of caramel. Thus, the invention of chocolate caramel seems to have been an event just waiting for the two civilizations on different sides of the Atlantic to come together.
It was only a matter of time before some genius mind would come up with the idea of combining the two. That lucky person was Milton Hershey. Today, the name ‘Hershey’s’ is synonymous with quality chocolate products, but few know the brain behind this company who psinglehandedly made chocolate caramel famous throughout the United States.
During the 1800s, when all major candy manufacturers in America were making traditional hard candies, Milton Hershey’s Lancaster Caramel Company was one of the few companies that focused on making chocolate-covered caramels instead of hard candies. But it was in 1893 when these chocolate-covered caramels really became popular. Hershey was so greatly influenced by the machines used by the Germans for making chocolate bars that he adapted the same technology and started mass producing caramel-covered chocolates.
HOW TO CELEBRATE NATIONAL CHOCOLATE CARAMEL DAY
Make a customized chocolate bouquet No one can resist a good old caramel-filled chocolate bar with nuts and gooey nougat. You can send a nice chocolate bouquet to cheer up your loved ones. Just go to your local grocery shop, pick up some caramel-filled chocolate bars, drop some caramel cookies in the mix and wrap them in see-through cellophane using a fancy ribbon or glitter tape.
Whip up some instant homemade ice cream There is no better way to welcome the summer than a bowl of homemade chocolate and caramel ice cream. All you need to do is blend some heavy whipping cream with chocolate chips, caramel sauce, and powdered sugar together in a blender. Pour the mix into an air-tight box and freeze it overnight. Drizzle some more chocolate chips with caramel sauce on top and enjoy!
Give a choco-caramel twist to your morning coffee This is probably one of the simplest ways to celebrate National Chocolate Caramel Day. All you need to do is grab a coffee mug and stir in your favorite instant coffee mix with half a teaspoon of warm water, caramel, and chocolate sauce. Boil a cup of full cream milk and pour it over your coffee mix. To take that perfect coffee picture for Instagram, you can top it with a dollop of whipping cream.
FACTS ABOUT HERSHEY’S KISSES THAT WILL BLOW YOUR MIND
Americans are obsessed with it More than 20,000 Kisses are made every single minute at Hershey’s plant in Pennsylvania.
It gives you an instant dose of energy There are more than 25 calories in a single Hershey Kiss.
It is available in various flavors Earlier, Hershey Miniatures was not sold as a separate product but was used for sampling the flavors of its upcoming chocolate bars.
Chocolate for the wealthy Early Hershey’s chocolate bars were so expensive that only very wealthy people could afford them.
Hershey’s makes millions of chocolate Kisses every day These chocolates are so popular that Hershey’s makes nearly 80 million of them alone every day.
WHY WE LOVE NATIONAL CHOCOLATE CARAMEL DAY
It is a versatile and lovable flavor You can make many types of desserts with chocolate caramel. It is known to enhance the taste of even the blandest foods. From pancakes and brownies to coffee and cookies, chocolate and caramel go well with all types of hot and cold desserts. You can also use it as a topping on your drinks or mix it inside your cookie or cake batter.
Bakers and chocolatiers love to experiment with caramel sauce Making dessert art can be a fun way to celebrate this holiday. Caramel sauce can be spread on a baking sheet and baked until it hardens. Then it can be used to decorate cakes and brownies. It sets very easily and can be molded into artistic shapes. Working in a cool environment delivers the best results.
You can make other alternatives for sweeteners There are many ways to prepare chocolate caramel in your home. You can make homemade chocolate and caramel sauce with various types of sweeteners. Instead of using refined sugar, you can make it with honey, condensed milk, brown sugar, and sugarcane juice. These products contain fewer calories and add a unique taste to the finished product.
WEF Demands Global Ban on Homegrown Food to Meet ‘Net Zero’
The World Economic Forum (WEF) is demanding that global governments enforce bans on members of the general public growing food at home in order to supposedly lower “emissions.”
The globalist organization claims that homegrown food contributes to “climate change.”
The WEF argues that banning homegrown food will help governments comply with their targets for meeting “Net Zero” by 2030.
In order to comply with the WEF’s “Net Zero” targets, governments must drastically reduce “carbon emissions” by 2030 and completely eliminate them by 2050.
According to so-called “experts” behind a recent WEF study, researchers apparently discovered that the “carbon footprint” of homegrown food is “destroying the planet.”
As a result, the WEF and other globalist climate zealots are now demanding that governments intervene and ban individuals from growing their own food in order to “save the planet” from “global warming.”
Globalists insist that allowing citizens to grow their own food will undermine efforts to meet the goals of the “Net Zero” agenda as dictated by the WEF and the United Nations (UN).
The research indicated that garden-to-table produce causes a far greater carbon footprint than conventional agricultural practices, such as those on rural farms.
This research, conducted by WEF-funded scientists at the University of Michigan, was published in the journal Nature Cities.
The study looked at different types of urban farms to see how much carbon dioxide (CO2) was produced when growing food.
On average, a serving of food made from traditional farms creates 0.07 kilograms (kg) of CO2, according to the study.
However, the WEF-funded researchers claim that the impact on the environment is almost five times higher at 0.34kg per portion for individual city gardens.
“The most significant contributor to carbon emissions on the urban agriculture sites we studied was the infrastructure used to grow the food, from raised beds to garden sheds to pathways, these constructions had a lot of carbon invested in their construction.”
The study recruited 73 urban agriculture sites around the world.
Those farms included some in Europe, the United States, and the United Kingdom.
The researchers say they conducted a comprehensive life cycle assessment on the site’s infrastructure, irrigation, and supplies.
Hawes and his teammates grouped urban agriculture sites into three categories: individual or family gardens, including allotments; collective gardens, such as community gardens; and larger, commercial-orientated urban farms.
The researchers also found other factors that they claimed are “hazardous” when it comes to impacting the alleged “climate crisis.”
Poorly managed compost and other synthetic inputs contribute to “global warming,” they warned.
They further advised that fruit was 8.6 times more “eco-friendly” when grown conventionally compared to in a city.
Vegetables, meanwhile, were 5.8 times better for the environment when left to the professionals, they claim.
Moreover, two-thirds of the “carbon footprint” of allotments is created by the garden itself, as per their data.
Nevertheless, they insist that people should be limited when it comes to keeping plants inside their homes, as well as growing food in their gardens.
Urban gardeners used to have no qualms about greening their indoor spaces.
For one, this reduces city living anxieties and emotional stress.
Also, being able to take care of plants inside their offices and homes could be part of interior design and a slight improvement in air quality.
However, climate alarmists are not going to give city dwellers peace of mind.
According to the WEF researchers, greening indoor spaces can also come at an environmental cost.
They cite “carbon emissions” from the trucks that transport plants, plastic pots, and synthetic fertilizers.
These, they said, are made from petroleum, and the harvesting of soil components like peat can “tear up slow-forming habitats.”
Susan Pell, the director of the U.S. Botanic Garden in Washington, D.C., downplayed the narrative.
Pell argues that members of the general public should at least still be able to grow potted plants at home, even if they can’t buy them.
They just need to consider the “environmental harm of indoor gardening,” she claims.
The news comes amid a growing war against the food supply to supposedly fight “global warming.”
As Slay News reported, 14 major American cities have set a “target” to comply with the WEF’s green agenda goals by banning meat and dairy products by 2030.
The agreement also seeks to ban private car ownership and place other restrictions on public freedoms to meet the WEF’s “Net Zero” goals.
The U.S. cities have formed a coalition called the “C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group” (C40), which has established an “ambitious target” to meet the WEF’s goals by the year 2030.
To fulfill the “target,” the C40 Cities have pledged that their residents will comply with the following list of mandatory rules:“0 kg [of] meat consumption” “0 kg [of] dairy consumption” “3 new clothing items per person per year” “0 private vehicles” owned “1 short-haul return flight (less than 1500 km) every 3 years per person”
The news comes as the WEF ramps up efforts to demand governments crack down on the freedoms of their citizens.
As Slay News reported earlier this year, WEF members unveiled plans for permanently mass-vaccinating the general public “every six months.”
During the WEF’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in January, globalists announced plans for bi-annual mass vaccinations with “long-acting” mRNA “vaccines.”
The plan is purportedly part of an effort to supposedly tackle multiple diseases.
During panel discussions at the meeting in Davos, WEF members laid out plans for tech-driven precision medicine, “long-acting injectables,” “climate-sensitive” vaccines, and mRNA therapeutics for non-communicable diseases.
The WEF and UN can place a zucchini where the sun does not shine!
There have been several claims to the origin of the sloppy Joe. One claim states that the sandwich made its debut in 1920, Havana, Cuba. A bartender called José Abel Otero. José created and successfully sold a simple sandwich based on a Cuban dish of shredded beef, tomato sauce, and spices called Ropa Vieja.
He also sold iced seafood, which would often melt and get the bar floor wet and sloppy. Since José was known for the sandwich and wet bar floors, customers linked the two and called him ‘sloppy Joe.’ Ironically, the name stuck to both him and the sandwich.
Some years later, Nobel prize winner and popular writer, Ernest Hemingway, who was a patron of the Havana bar, suggested a friend, Joe Russel, who had just set up a the restaurant in Key West, Florida, serves the sandwich but rebrands it as the ‘Havana sandwich.’
Another origin story dictates that the Joe may have been a variation of the very common ‘loose meat’ sandwiches of the 1930s. At a Cafe in Sioux City, a cook named Joe added some tomato sauce to the loose meat, giving birth to the goodness known as the sloppy Joe.
In 1969, Hunt’s, a ketchup maker, introduced the ‘Manwich,’ which made a more convenient way to prepare the sloppy Joe. The Manwich was a can containing the sloppy Joe sauce and was promoted as more than just a sandwich.
NATIONAL SLOPPY JOE DAY FAQS
What is the difference between the Manwich and sloppy Joe?
What is the difference between a sloppy Joe and a hamburger?
How do you make a sloppy Joe at home?
HOW TO CELEBRATE NATIONAL SLOPPY JOE DAY
Make your sloppy Joes Go sloppy by making these delicious sandwiches in your house. You can tweak the recipe and enjoy it with your family.
Go out for sloppy Joes Celebrate this holiday by trying out a unique sloppy Joe in an eatery. Just in case your D.I.Y. sloppy Joe is a flop, or you just don’t want to cook, go-to food places that serve this awesome sandwich.
Host a sloppy contest Have fun with friends and family! Throw a sloppy Joe contest and crown the person who makes the tastiest sandwich.
5 FACTS ABOUT THE SLOPPY JOE
It goes by many names Sloppy Joes are also called yum-yum, slush burger, dynamite, Manwich, and barbecue.
Meet Joe’s sister, Jane Though they are the same thing, the sloppy Jane is considered the healthier version of sloppy Joe.
More than beef The ground beef filling can be replaced with chicken, chuck roast, and turkey.
Open to vegans The sloppy Joe recipe is also modified to suit vegans.
For a tight budget Sloppy Joes were first created for those with small food budgets.
WHY WE LOVE NATIONAL SLOPPY JOE DAY
We love the distinct taste of a sloppy Joe Sloppy Joes have a unique taste. It is addictive, and most of us just can’t get enough of them. We celebrate this holiday to share our love for the sandwich.
We experiment We try sloppy Joes with different toppings that we love. We can explore the craziest fillings and have fun.
We make memories This day is another chance to celebrate good food and make memories with our friends and family. We take pictures and albums that will serve as reminders.
As it is being proclaimed President Trump is a Nazi…
Parents should, and usually do, understand they must be careful about language.
Yes, there are more Peter Carl Faberge offerings.
St Patrick’s Breastplate (an excerpt from this famous prayer, attributed to St Patrick – patron Saint of Ireland)
Christ with me, Christ before me, Christ behind me, Christ in me, Christ beneath me, Christ above me, Christ on my right, Christ on my left, Christ when I lie down, Christ when I sit down, Christ when I arise, Christ in the heart of every man who thinks of me, Christ in the mouth of everyone who speaks of me, Christ in every eye that sees me, Christ in every ear that hears me.
Beware the Ides of March, or at least, be aware of when “the Ides” even takes place (March 15). The word “Ides” is derived from the Latin word “idus,” which refers to the middle day of any month in the ancient Roman calendar. The Ides are specifically the fifteenth day of the months of March, May, July, or October, and the thirteenth day of the remaining months. The Ides were the designated days for settling debt each month in the Roman empire and generally included the seven days preceding the Ides for this purpose. No doubt debtors who could not pay their debts considered the Ides to be unlucky days as they were typically thrown into prison or forced into slavery.
WHEN IS IDES OF MARCH 2025?
As the word ‘ides’ refers to the middle of the month, the Ides of March is on March 15. Contrary to popular superstitious belief surrounding its origins, Ides simply marks the first day of the full moon in every month.
HISTORY OF IDES OF MARCH
The unlucky pall over the Ides of March has a more portentous tie to ancient Rome. Roman Emperor Julius Caesar was famously unlucky on the Ides of March in 44 B.C. when he was assassinated by his senators, fearing their ruler was becoming a dictator.
Movies often distort historical events to make them more entertaining for the sake of drawing bigger audiences and better reviews. The same was true when English playwright William Shakespeare wrote his famous tragedy “Julius Caesar.”
Much of what we commonly believe to be true about the demise of the unlucky emperor on that fateful Ides of March is based more on Shakespeare’s play than historical evidence, according to author Barry Strauss. His book “The Death of Caesar” dismantles the half-truths about the ruler’s tragic end on the Ides of March in 44 B.C. Here are three myths he calls out about the Ides of March killing of Emperor Julius Caesar:
Myth #1: Julius Caesar was admonished to “Beware the Ides of March” by an unknown Soothsayer.
False: The omen was actually “Beware the next 30 days” and was prophesied on February 15, 44 B.C. by an Etruscan Soothsayer named Spurinna.
Myth #2: Brutus was Caesar’s best friend and led the assassination plot.
False: There were in fact three conspirators: Brutus, Cassius, and Decimus. Decimus was known to be most trusted by Caesar and is considered to have been the leader of the murder conspiracy.
Myth #3: Caesar nobly uttered “Et tu, Brute” (you too, Brutus) with his dying breath.
False: Caesar singling out Brutus as he lay dying was an invention of the Renaissance movement. The emperor was a trained soldier who fought for his life, tried to escape the ambush, and never uttered these words.