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Saturday, November 26, 2011

McDonald's drops egg supplier after cruelty footage

McDonald's will be looking for a new egg supplier for their McMuffins after Mercy For Animals released footage from an undercover investigation of animal cruelty at Sparboe Egg Farms, one of their suppliers.

After viewing the footage, McDonald's said in an issued statement that they would no longer be accepting their eggs from Spargoe, and said "the behavior on tape is disturbing and completely unacceptable."

(Warning: Video contains graphic images of animal cruelty. Watch with caution.)

"McDonald's expects all of our suppliers to meet our stringent requirements for delivering high quality food prepared in a humane and responsible manner," McDonald's Vice President of Sustainability Bob Langert, said in the statement.

The hidden-camera footage shows hens being crammed into wire cages, workers burning the beaks of young chicks without pain killers, live chicks thrown into plastic bags and workers tormenting the animals.

The president and owner of Sparboe issued a letter on the website saying they are launching an internal investigation and management changes have taken place. They said they have identified four employees involved in the activities, and they have been terminated.

MFA urged the McDonald's Corporation to end its use of eggs from hens in battery cages, and according to their website, there are no federal laws that provide protection for the birds at the factory farm or during slaughter.

Mercy For Animals is a national non-profit organization that works toward preventing cruelty to farm animals.


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Sorry, your grocery bill is going up

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Grocery bill going up? You're not alone

Paula McGowan has cut out soda, switched to store brands for other foods and even sent her boyfriend hunting for deer so she can put food on the table.

Still, she finds herself struggling with higher food prices.

“It’s milk, bread, just the basic stuff,” she said. “We’re looking at basics and it’s all going up.”

After two years in which overall food prices barely budged, groceries are getting more expensive.

The price of food at home is projected to rise by 4 to 5 percent this year, and another 2 to 3 percent next year, according to the Agriculture Department. That’s adding another financial worry for many people already living with tight budgets thanks to the weak economy and high jobless rate.

The percentage of people who say they had enough money to buy food in the last 12 months fell to its lowest level in three years, according to a Gallup poll released this month.

The vast majority of Americans surveyed — 79.4 percent — said they have been able to buy the food they need. But that doesn’t mean it’s easy.

McGowan, 44, lives with her boyfriend in Versailles, Ky. Her job in information technology has been stable, but her boyfriend has had bouts of unemployment and now runs his own lawn mowing business. That’s making it difficult to keep up with rising costs.

“I literally live paycheck to paycheck,” she said.

McGowan isn’t alone. Nearly one-third of Americans say rising food and gas prices are making it difficult to save money, according to a recent poll from Country Financial.

When she goes to the grocery store, McGowan said she brings a detailed list, coupons and a strict budget. She buys low-cost but filling food like rice and pasta in bulk and relies on cheaper protein like eggs to stretch the couple’s meals.

“For us, having bacon on a Sunday morning is a luxury,” she said.

She’s counting on deer hunting season to provide them with meat for the winter.

Ricky Volpe, a research economist with the USDA’s Economic Service, said there are many reasons food prices are rising.

Some crops have been hurt by bad weather, and a surge in fuel prices has made it more expensive to produce and transport food.

In addition, he said, the weak dollar and growing overseas demand for meat are pushing up the prices of beef, pork and dairy products.

Some foods, including beef, are in shorter supply because ranchers cut back on how much they were producing when the economy weakened and now must play catch-up. The price of beef was 10 percent higher this September than it was a year ago, according to government data.

For many food producers, it’s a combination of things.

“Companies can usually handle one or two of their commodities ticking up,” said Ryland Maltsbarger, senior economist with the agriculture service at IHS Global Insight. “But when you get labor costs on top of transportation costs on top of commodity costs on top of a few other costs … it all plays into it.”

There are ways to save money.

For example, Volpe noted that while the price of fresh fruits and vegetables has gone up considerably, prices for canned or frozen produce aren’t going up as quickly. Fresh fruits and vegetables costs 7.6 percent more in September than a year earlier, while processed produce prices were up by 4 percent over that same period.

Also, while beef prices have gone up substantially, chicken farmers have been able to respond more quickly to increased demand, so poultry prices aren’t expected to rise as fast. Poultry prices were up 3 percent in September over a year ago.

As the holidays approach, food costs add another challenge for people on a budget. The American Farm Bureau is projecting that a turkey dinner will cost 13 percent more this year than last year.

McGowan said she planned ahead for Thanksgiving last year, when she got a $10 Butterball coupon from ordering office supplies and a $25 grocery gift card from her employer.

Those funds went toward a turkey that’s already in her freezer. Now she only has to budget for side dishes and oil – to deep-fry the bird.

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Shooting suspect thought Obama was the 'devil'

BOISE, Idaho — A man accused of firing an assault rifle at the White House believed he was Jesus and thought President Barack Obama was the Antichrist, according to court documents and those who knew him.

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At one point, he even suggested to an acquaintance the president was planning to implant computer tracking chips into children.

Oscar Ramiro Ortega-Hernandez, 21, was charged Thursday with attempting to assassinate the president or his staff.

Story: Man charged with trying to assassinate Obama

He is accused of firing nine rounds at the White House last Friday night — one of them cracking a window of the first family's living quarters — when Obama and the first lady were away. If convicted, Ortega faces up to life in prison.

Ortega was arrested Wednesday at a western Pennsylvania hotel when a desk clerk there recognized him and called police.

'Mental health issue'
Ortega's public defender, Christopher Brown, declined comment after his first court hearing in Pennsylvania. Ortega's mother has said he has no history of mental illness, though when authorities were looking for him, they reported he had "mental health issues."

In Idaho Falls, where Ortega is from, a computer consultant told The Associated Press that the two met July 8 after Ortega asked for help editing a 30-minute infomercial.

Monte McCall said that during the meeting at Ortega's family's Mexican restaurant, Ortega pulled out worn sheets of yellow paper with handwritten notes and started to talk about his predictions that the world would end in 2012.

"He said, 'Well, you know the president is getting ready to make an announcement that they're going to put GPS chips in all the children, so they're safe,'" McCall said. "... And then he said, 'That's just what the Antichrist is going to do to mark everybody.'"

Kimberly Allen, the mother of Ortega's former fiancee, said he had been well-mannered and kind in the four years she had known him.

But he recently began making statements to her daughter that were out of character, including that he believed he was Jesus.

Allen said the family was worried when he went to Utah recently, where he said he had business, and didn't come back. Ortega's family reported him missing Oct. 31.

Allen said they were flabbergasted to hear he was wanted in Washington.

"I believe that the boy needs help," said Allen.

Ex-fiancee: 'I love him'
Her daughter, Jessica Galbraith, was engaged to Ortega and is the mother of their 2-year-old son. She declined to comment Thursday except to say: "I love him, and I'm here for him."

It was unclear why or when they split.

Reached by the AP on Thursday, Ortega's mother said she didn't have anything to say. She earlier told the Post Register in Idaho Falls her son has no history of mental illness.

"He has different ideas than other people, just like everyone, but he was perfectly fine the last time I saw him," Maria Hernandez told the newspaper. "He might be saying weird stuff that sounds crazy, but that doesn't mean (he) is crazy. He might be confused and scared."

At his first appearance in court in Pennsylvania, Ortega sat quietly, his hands free but his feet shackled. He said only, "Yes, ma'am" when he was asked if he understood that he would be going back to Washington to face the charge.

According to a court document released after the hearing, authorities recovered nine spent shell casings from Ortega's car, which was found abandoned near the White House shortly after the shooting. An assault rifle with a scope was found inside.

A person who knows him subsequently told investigators that he had become increasingly agitated with the federal government and was convinced it was conspiring against him, the document said.

Others told investigators that Ortega had reportedly said Obama was the Antichrist and the "devil." Ortega also apparently said he "needed to kill" the president.

Obamas' daughters present?
Authorities said Ortega was clad in black when he pulled his car within view of the White House on Friday night, fired shots and then sped away. The White House has not said whether the Obamas' daughters, Sasha and Malia, were there at the time or commented on the shooting.

Ortega was questioned by police on Friday morning, before the shootings, just across the Potomac River from Washington in Arlington, Virginia.

Police said they stopped him after a report of suspicious behavior, but let him go after photographing him because they had no reason to make an arrest.

Ortega has an arrest record in three states but has not been linked to any radical organizations, U.S. Park Police have said.

This is not the first time the White House has come under attack.

In the last 40 years, the landmark has faced threats ranging from a stolen helicopter that landed on the grounds in 1974 to a man who wielded a sawed-off shotgun on a sidewalk outside in 1984. In 1994 alone, there were five threats including a plane crash on the lawn and a suspected drive-by shooting. Another man fired at least 29 rounds from a semiautomatic weapon, with 11 striking the White House.

Dan Bongino, a former Secret Service agent who served on the presidential details for Obama and President George W. Bush, said Friday's shooting would likely mean tighter security and coordination.

© 2011 msnbc.com


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He won $250K with ticket he pulled from trash

Sometimes it pays to not take out the trash.

That’s what Andrew Hunter of Dawsonville, Ga., found out earlier this week. The 24-year-old server at a Taco Mac, a Georgia restaurant chain, had thrown out a lottery ticket he thought was worthless, but then had a second thought.

Story: Woman finds her diamond ring in garbage truck

“I didn’t realize you could win $3 for matching one number plus the Mega Ball,” he said, according to galottery.com, the website of the Georgia Lottery.

So Hunter reached into the trash, took the ticket back out, and took it to a convenience store in Cumming, near the Taco Mac where he works. He reinvested the $3 in three $1 Mega Millions tickets.

Story: Husband digs through nine tons of trash to find wife's ring

In Tuesday’s drawing, one of the three won him $250,000.

“I would have never bought that ticket if I hadn’t pulled the other ticket out of the trash,” Hunter said. “I don’t think it’s really hit me yet.”

Hunter said he plans to invest most of his winnings.

© 2011 MSNBC Interactive.  Reprints


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Rahm Emanuel for president? 'Not interested. Not going to do it.'

By Jessica Hopper
Rock Center

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, the tough talking politician who has served two presidents and been a member of Congress, said that he has ruled out any plans for higher office.

In an interview with Rock Center’s Harry Smith, Emanuel said he has no plans to be America’s first Jewish president.

“Not interested. Not going to do it.  No. I’ll do it in Hebrew, Lo,” Emanuel told Smith with his famously blunt tongue. 

When reminded of other politicians who vowed to avoid a presidential run only to run years later, Emanuel said, “I don’t care.”

When pressed by Smith, Emanuel said, “What part of it is [it] that I’m not getting across?  Here, give me a piece of paper, I’ll sign it,” he said.

Emanuel, 51, gave up his job as President Obama’s White House chief of staff to become mayor of his hometown, Chicago, Ill. He’s also been an aide to former President Bill Clinton and made a reputation in Washington, D.C., for his sharp elbows and famously foul mouth.  Legend has it, he once sent a dead fish to a political opponent.

Now in his sixth month as mayor, some say a different, softer side of Emanuel is emerging and resonating with Chicagoans. 

Emanuel might still be in the honeymoon phase of his term, but the challenges he faces as the leader of the nation’s third largest city are great. Among them are a $600 million budget deficit, high crime levels and a battle with the local teachers union.

Emanuel said all of those challenges are “manageable,” but one challenge in particular truly makes him pause.

“You go around sometimes, kids are growing up in an environment in parts of the city that you wouldn’t let your own kids grow up in.  There’s no sense of life and there’s an emptiness in their eyes that you don’t know if you can change,” he said. 

Emanuel, a father of three, has imposed an earlier curfew for kids 12 and under to help keep them out of trouble and has been negotiating with the local teachers union to make good on a campaign promise to lengthen the school year and school day.

“Reaching a child who has the flicker of life snuffed out? That’s daunting. These other things, we can handle,” he said.  “That to me is what gives you pause…and I think I can say this since it’s not one of my strong suits, that’s what humbles you.”

Editor's Note: Tune into Rahm Emanuel's exclusive interview with Rock Center's Harry Smith on Monday, Nov. 21 at 10 pm/9 ct.


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Video: Syracuse asst. coach accused of child sex abuse

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