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Shutdown Politics Has Republicans Singing Government’s Praises

By: Carl Hulse
As Republicans try to pin blame for shutdown damage on Democrats, they are hailing a federal bureaucracy they normally bash as wasteful and overreaching.

A Transportation Security Administration checkpoint at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago last week on the first day of the government shutdown.

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Cows Wear High-Tech Collars Now

By: Eli Tan
The wearables help dairy farmers gather more data so their animals are happier and produce more milk.
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This Ohio Farm Community Is a Mecca for the ‘MAHA Mom’

By: Caroline Kitchener and Maddie McGarvey
In a neighborhood that appeals to people from both the right and the left, residents strive for a finely tuned state of political harmony.

Children learning to garden with their mothers during a “Kids Farm Day” event earlier this month in Aberlin Springs, an “agri-community” in southwest Ohio.

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The Tick Situation Is Getting Worse

By: Maggie Astor
As temperatures rise, ticks of several kinds are flourishing in ways that threaten people’s health.

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250 Million Honeybees Escape After a Truck Rolls Over in Washington State

By: Neil Vigdor
Several emergency responders were stung after the truck flipped in a sparsely populated area of Whatcom County. Efforts were underway to recapture the bees.
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What the War on California’s Water Is Really About

By: Ryan Christopher Jones
If we are to take seriously the threats of drought, climate change and water security, we should not reduce this place to a warring of two — or even many — sides.
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Is Milk Safe? Your Questions About Bird Flu and Dairy, Answered

By: Dani Blum and Alice Callahan
Federal officials will soon begin testing the country’s milk supply for the virus. Here’s what to know.

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Three Ideas to Beat the Heat, and the People Who Made Them Happen

By: Somini Sengupta
As temperatures soar around the world, practical experiments are emerging to protect people.

Hansa Ahir, left, who salvages recyclable waste for a living in Ahmedabad, India, bought an insurance policy to cover her income on days when heat makes it dangerous to work.

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These Cities Aren’t Banning Meat. They Just Want You to Eat More Plants.

By: Cara Buckley
Meat and dairy production are linked to emissions of methane, a potent greenhouse gas.

Activists at the COP28 U.N. climate summit in Dubai last December calling for a “Plant Based Treaty,” to call attention to the role played by greenhouse gases that are generated by meat and dairy production.

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A ‘Revolutionary’ Way to Feed the World That’s Very Old

By: Somini Sengupta
The U.S. global food security envoy is pushing to bring back traditional African crops that American policies helped to sideline.

Harvesting cassava on a farm in Oyo, Nigeria, in May. A new U.S. program is trying to promote a return to traditional crops like cowpeas, cassava and millets.

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Austria’s Schnapps Distilleries Tempt Winter Tourists and Skiers

By: Aishvarya Kavi
All across the Tyrol region of Austria, Alpine farms and distilleries tempt skiers and other wintertime visitors with a strong nip of a local tradition.

Alexander Rainer, who runs the Rochelt distillery in Fritzens, Austria, lets his schnapps rest in demijohns to balance the alcohol and fruit flavors before filling the bottles by hand.

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Thailand’s Marijuana Business Is Growing Despite Regulatory Risks

By: Mike Ives
The country’s legal marijuana business — a rarity in Asia — is struggling with oversupply, illegal imports and regulatory ambiguity. Investors are piling in anyway.

A cannabis farm in Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand. The latest regulations for marijuana could give an edge to a high-quality domestic supply of weed.

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