Small A.I. Firm Wins $2 Billion in Contracts for Breakthrough "Living Software"

Denver firm proves its possible to use AI to save the lives of soldiers in combat. England, Germany, Japan and Australia have all signed contracts within the past 18 months.

Hard right makes hay with European farmers' anger ahead of June elections

RAF CASERT
April 18, 2024

ANDEREN, Netherlands (AP) -- Inside the barn on the flat fields of the northern Netherlands, Jos Ubels cradles a newborn Blonde d'Aquitaine calf, the latest addition to his herd of over 300 dairy cattle.

Little could be more idyllic.

Little, says Ubels, could be more under threat.

As Europe seeks to address the threat of climate change, it's imposing more rules on farmers like Ubels. He spends a day a week on bureaucracy, answering the demands of European Union and national officials who seek to decide when farmers can sow and reap, and how much fertilizer or manure they can use.

Meanwhile, competition from cheap imports is undercutting prices for their produce, without having to meet the same standards. Mainstream political parties failed to act on farmers' complaints for decades, Ubels says. Now the radical right is stepping in.

Across much of the 27-nation EU, from Finland to Greece, Poland to Ireland, farmers' discontent is gathering momentum as June EU parliamentary elections draw near.

Ubels is the second in command of the Farmers Defense Force, one of the most prominent groups to emerge from the foment. The FDF, whose symbol is a crossed double pitchfork, was formed in 2019 and has since expanded to Belgium. It has ties to similar groups elsewhere in the EU and is a driving force behind a planned June 4 demonstration in Brussels it hopes will bring 100,000 people to the EU capital and help define the outcome of the elections.

"It is time that we fight back," said Ubels. "We're done with quietly listening and doing what we are told."

Has he lost trust in democracy? "No. ... I have lost my faith in politics. And that is one step removed."

The FDF itself puts it more ominously on its website: "Our confidence in the rule of law is wavering!"

___

This story, supported by the Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting, is part of an ongoing Associated Press series covering threats to democracy in Europe.

___

'DON'T LET UP!'

In March, protesting farmers from Belgium ran amok at a demonstration outside EU headquarters in Brussels, setting fire to a subway station entrance and attacking police with eggs and liquid manure. In France, protesters tried to storm a government building.

In a video from another protest, in front of burning tires and pallets, FDF leader Mark van den Oever said two politicians made him sick to his stomach, saying they would "soon be at the center of attention." The FDF denies this was a threat of physical violence.

Across the EU, over the winter, tractor convoys blockaded ports and major roads, sometimes for days, in some of the most severe farm protests in half a century.

Farmers and the EU have had a sometimes testy relationship. What's new is the shift toward the extreme right.

Destitute after World War II and with hunger still a scourge in winter, Europe desperately needed food security. The EU stepped in, securing abundant food for the population, turning the sector into an export powerhouse and currently funding farmers to the tune of over 50 billion euros a year.

Yet, despite agriculture's strategic importance, the EU acknowledges that farmers earn about 40% less than non-farm workers, while 80% of support goes to a privileged 20% of farmers. Many of the bloc's 8.7 million farm workers are close to or below the poverty line.

At the same time, the EU is seeking to push through stringent nature and agricultural laws as part of its Green Deal to make the bloc climate-neutral by 2050. Agriculture accounts for more than 10% of EU greenhouse gas emissions, from sources such as the nitrous oxide in fertilizers, carbon dioxide from vehicles and methane from cattle.

Cutting these emissions has forced short-notice changes on farmers at a time of financial insecurity. The COVID-19 pandemic and surging inflation have increased the cost of goods and labor, while farmers' earnings are down as squeezed consumers cut back.

And then there's the war next door. After Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022, the EU granted tariff-free access for agricultural imports from Ukraine, many of them exempt from the strict environmental standards the bloc enforces on its own producers. Imports surged from 7 billion euros in 2021 to 13 billion euros the following year, causing gluts and undercutting farmers, particularly in Poland.

"Don't let up," Marion Maréchal, the lead candidate for France's extreme right Reconquest! party in the June elections, exhorted farmers at a protest earlier this year. "You have to be in the streets. You have to make yourself heard. You have to --" she tried to finish the sentence but was drowned out by shouts of "Don't Let Up! Don't Let Up!"

FERTILE GROUND

Farming in Europe is about more than just food; it touches on identity. In France, the far right taps into the love of "terroir," that mythical combination of soil, location, culture and climate.

"The French realize that the farmers are the roots of our society," said Maréchal.

Such sentiments echo across Europe. In Ireland, where more than a million people died in the famine of 1845-1852, farming "is deep in our culture, in our psyche," said Environment Minister Eamon Ryan, a Green Party lawmaker.

The far right has used farming as a way to attack mainstream parties. In Italy, the far right has mocked the EU's efforts to promote a low-carbon diet, playing on farmers' fears that lab-grown proteins and insects could one day replace meat.

"Revolt is the language of those who are not listened to. Now, back off," warned far-right Italian lawmaker Nicola Procaccini in February. In a few months, he said, the European elections "will put people back in place of ideologies."

Such calls fall on fertile ground. According to predictions by the European Council on Foreign Relations, the radical right Identity and Democracy group could become the third biggest overall in the next European Parliament, behind the Christian Democrats and the Socialists, but edging out the Liberals and Greens. The farm protests are providing vital leverage.

A SPADE IS A SPADE

One farmer sidestepping militant demonstrations is Bart Dochy in western Belgium. As the Christian Democrat mayor of the farming town of Ledegem and a regional parliamentarian in Flanders, he represents the traditional forces in European farming communities: Christianity and conservativism. When Socialism took the big cities, the countryside and its farmers remained staunchly Christian Democrat.

That's now changed. Once, billboards with the cry, "Save our farmers!" would have come from his party; now, they bear the logo of the far-right Flemish Interest, predicted by polls to become the biggest party in Belgium in June.

"In a sense it is only logical that the extreme parties have specialized in capturing that discontent. They call a spade a spade. And that is good," he said. But farming is complicated, he warned: nature, trade, budgets, commodity prices and geopolitics are all involved. Solutions will have to come from common sense, "not from the extremes."

Dochy's Christian Democrats are part of the biggest group in the EU parliament, the European People's Party, once a strong proponent of the EU's Green Deal. Farmers, after all, are among the biggest losers from climate change, affected at different times by flooding, wildfires, drought and extreme temperatures.

But ever since the demonstrations started, EU politics on agriculture and climate have shifted rightwards, outraging many of the center right's old allies with whom it set up the Green Deal. Measures to reduce pesticide use and protect biodiversity have been weakened, while the protesters' demands to cut regulation have been heard.

But as the rhetoric heats up, so too does the climate. Data for early 2024 shows record-breaking temperatures in Europe. In Greece -- where an estimated 1,750 square kilometers (675 square miles) burned in 2023, the worst fire in EU records -- wildfires are already breaking out, weeks earlier than expected.

The far right offers no detailed solutions to the climate crisis but it has proved adept at tapping into farmers' frustrations. In its program for the June elections, the Dutch far-right party, the PVV, is short on details but big on slogans about "climate hysteria" and its "tsunami of rules." Nature and climate laws, it said, "should not lead to whole sectors being forced into bankruptcy."

Ubels made the case for farmers' realpolitik.

"The government doesn't listen to us, but the opposition does," he said.

Continue Reading...

Popular

Elon Musk Gives One-Word Response To Joe Biden's Dig At Donald Trump At White House Correspondents' Dinner

Elon Musk reacted to President Joe Biden's recent comments at the White House correspondents' dinner with a one-word response that sparked some discussion on social media.

Donald Trump Could Still Win Even If He Loses In Supreme Court Over Presidential Immunity Claim

Former President Donald Trump could see a strategic victory in his Supreme Court case, even if the court dismisses his claim regarding presidential immunity.

Jeff Bezos' Next Trillion Dollar Bet (shocking) - Ad

Wall Street legend has just uncovered one tiny Maryland company that could become the next Nvidia. Few in the media are talking about this story yet...but in the next 6 months that's all they'll talk about.

Olympic track uniforms spark online debate about who designed them and why they're so skimpy

PARIS (AP) — U.S. track and field athletes have around four dozen pieces to choose from when assembling their uniforms at the Olympics. The one grabbing the most attention is a high-cut leotard that barely covers the bikini line and has triggered debate between those who think it is sexist and others who argue they don't need the internet to make sure they have good uniforms.

Should You Buy Bitcoin in 2024? [Expert's Shocking Answer] - Ad

Bitcoin minted 100,000 millionaires and if you're not one of them, that ship has sailed. But there's another millionaire-minting crypto at our doorstep... research shows this coin could be 20X bigger than Bitcoin by the end of the decade. With crypto starting to heat up again, this could be the perfect time to get in.

Move Over Nvidia: Experts Bullish On Intel's AI Chip, Predict Surge In These Three Global Stocks

Charlie Chan and his team at Morgan Stanley forecast that the total Gaudi shipment volume could hit 300-400k units in 2025, generating $2-3bn revenue for Intel.

Hochul announces budget outline as lawmakers continue to hash out details

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York Gov. Kathy Hochul on Monday announced the framework of a $237 billion that includes broad plans to drive new housing construction, address the influx of migrants and crack down on .

Buy This Next Gen Crypto Before Its Big Upgrade - Ad

Experts predict this one crypto will soar 7,200% by the end of the decade... and grow 20X bigger than bitcoin. But you must get in before it's big.

This Man, Who Never Went To University, Is Making $1.2M-A-Year At Deloitte At The Age Of 30

Ben Newton, a former apprentice at Deloitte, has achieved the feat of becoming a partner at the age of 30, earning $1.2 million a year.

Southwest Airlines is considering changes to its quirky boarding and seating practices

DALLAS (AP) — Southwest Airlines is studying changes to its quirky boarding and seating policies as it searches for ways to .

One Coin to Rule Them All... - Ad

Hardly any investors are talking about this coin but I believe that's about to change with some potentially huge news! Get in on the ground floor while it's rock bottom with this new how-to guide, just $3.

The world's largest 3D printer is at a university in Maine. It just unveiled an even bigger one

ORONO, Maine (AP) — The world’s largest 3D printer has created a house that can cut construction time and labor. An even larger printer unveiled on Tuesday may one day create entire neighborhoods.

Jim Cramer Turns Bullish On Palantir: 'Make A Move And Buy Some'

CNBC’s “Mad Money” host Jim Cramer has given a thumbs up to Palantir Technologies Inc. (NYSE:PLTR), sparking interest among investors.

"If I Had To Pour Every Single Penny of My Retirement Into Just ONE STOCK..." - Ad

The former Goldman Sachs VP -- who called everything from Microsoft's 1,100% surge... to the death of the 60/40 portfolio -- is now stepping forward with his most explicit message yet: "Make this ONE STOCK the cornerstone of your portfolio."

If O.J. Simpson's assets go to court, Goldman, Brown families could be first in line

LOS ANGELES (AP) — without having paid the lion’s share of the $33.5 million judgment a California civil jury awarded to the families of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend .

Winner of $1.3 billion Powerball jackpot is an immigrant from Laos who has cancer

SALEM, Ore. (AP) — One of the winners of a last month is an immigrant from Laos who has had cancer for eight years and had his latest chemotherapy treatment last week.

The Next Nvidia? - Ad

Wall Street legend has just uncovered one tiny Maryland company that could become the next Nvidia. Few in the media are talking about this story yet...but in the next 6 months that's all they'll talk about.

An NPR editor who wrote a critical essay on the company has resigned after being suspended

NEW YORK (AP) — A National Public Radio editor who wrote an essay criticizing his employer for promoting liberal views resigned on Wednesday, a day after it was revealed that .

Buy This A.I. Stock Before Elon's "A.I. Day" on May 16 - Ad

Luke Lango is now recommending this little-known A.I. stock because it could supply Elon Musk with a critical piece of infrastructure for his new A.I. venture, something Luke is calling "Elon's A.I. 2.0". Once Elon reveals it on May 16, you may have missed the biggest gains.

Apple CEO says that he wants to increase investments in Vietnam

HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — Apple CEO Tim Cook said Tuesday that he wants to further increase investment in Vietnam a day after the company announced it would spending on suppliers in the Southeast Asian manufacturing hub.

Why Dragonfly Energy Shares Are Rocketing Premarket Tuesday

Dragonfly Energy shares surge premarket after reporting Q4 2023 results, with decreased sales and improved Adjusted EBITDA.

Has Jeff Bezos Found the Next Nvidia? - Ad

Wall Street legend has just uncovered one tiny Maryland company that could become the next Nvidia. Few in the media are talking about this story yet...but in the next 6 months that's all they'll talk about.

Top 3 Financial Stocks That Are Ticking Portfolio Bombs

As of April 11, 2024, three stocks in the financial sector could be flashing a real warning to investors who value momentum as a key criteria in their trading decisions.

Elizabeth Warren Says Trump Had Only 2 Accomplishments As President: 'Huge Difference Between' Biden, Trump

Elizabeth Warren thinks Donald Trump only accomplished two things when he was president and neither is highlighted as a positive by the senator.

America's Final Republican President - Ad

Louis Navellier believes Donald J. Trump could go down as America's last Republican president. But NOT for the reasons you may think... If he's right, the soul of this country will change forever...

First major attempts to regulate AI face headwinds from all sides

DENVER (AP) — Artificial intelligence is helping decide which Americans get the job interview, the apartment, even medical care, but the to reign in bias in AI decision making are facing headwinds from every direction.

Dead whale in New Jersey had a fractured skull among numerous injuries, experts find

LONG BEACH TOWNSHIP, N.J. (AP) — A post-mortem examination of a whale that washed ashore on New Jersey's Long Beach Island found that the animal had sustained numerous blunt force injuries including a fractured skull and vertebrae.

Central Banks Buying Gold in Record Numbers - Ad

Most folks have completely missed the fact that the world's Central Banks have been quietly gobbling up as much gold as they can... Stacking it in their locked vaults on pallets in record numbers. Find out why right here (and see what you can do to get in too with just a few dollars).

FBI Chief To Warn Congress Of Potential Coordinated Attack In US Similar To Russia Massacre: 'Threats To Our Public Safety And National Security...So Elevated'

FBI Director Christopher Wray is expected to raise concerns about the possibility of a coordinated attack in the United States, similar to the recent massacre in Russia, in a congressional hearing on Thursday.

5 cars from the Beijing auto show that reflect China's vision for the future of driving

BEIJING (AP) — China's vision of the future of the automobile — electrified and digitally connected — is on display at the ongoing .

Titanium Shortage Threatens Industry Titan - Ad

A titan of the aerospace industry announced it would no longer purchase titanium from Russia, a key supplier. With a global shortage of the lightweight "wonder metal" already in play, aerospace-grade titanium has become particularly scarce.

US to require automatic emergency braking on new vehicles in 5 years and set performance standards

DETROIT (AP) — In the not-too-distant future, automatic emergency braking will have to come standard on all new passenger vehicles in the United States, a requirement that the government says will save hundreds of lives and prevent thousands of injuries every year.

Apple, Rivian, Amazon, Nikola, Tesla: Why These 5 Stocks Are On Investors' Radars Today

On Thursday, the primary U.S. stock market benchmarks closed higher, with the S&P 500 increasing by 0.74% to reach 5,199.06.

NOT Bitcoin or Options... But Already Making Folks Rich in 2024 - Ad

Former Goldman Sachs Trader Dr. David Eifrig just stepped forward with a way to protect your money this November -- no matter who wins the presidential seat. In fact, election chaos will likely make this even better. It's a "secret" of the rich and connected that 99% of folks don't know about...

RTX Soars Above Estimates in Q1, Reiterates FY24 Outlook

RTX Corporation (NYSE: RTX) reported 12% increase in Q1 FY24 net sales to $19.3 billion, beating consensus. Collins Aerospace and Pratt & Whitney drove the growth.

Forget AI, Imperium Is Expected to Grow 320,000% In 3 Years - Ad

Three of the world's biggest AI companies -- Google, Nvidia and Intel -- have even partnered with my No. 1 Imperium company to get on this massive mega trend. The average investor hasn't caught on yet, but you can still invest in my No. 1 Imperium company for just $10 a share.

Nvidia Robotics Expert Praises Tesla FSD's 'Human-Like Maneuvers' As Magical

Tesla's latest FSD feature has impressed users like Nvidia employee Yuke Zhu who called it 'magical'. Tesla has made FSD more accessible with price cuts and free trials.

Trending Now

Information, charts or examples are for illustration and educational purposes only and not for individualized investment management This message contains commercial elements, such as advertising. We only send these offers to those who have opted in to our newsletter. Past performance is not indicative of future results. For these reasons we strongly suggest trading in a DEMO/Simulated account. The information provided by us is for educational and informational purposes only. We make no representations or warranties concerning the products, practices or procedures of any company or entity mentioned or recommended and have not determined if the statements and opinions of the advertiser are accurate, correct or truthful. If you use, act upon or make decisions in reliance on information contained or any external source linked within it, you do so at your own peril and agree to hold us, our officers, directors, shareholders, affiliates and agents without fault.

Copyright activatrade.ca
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service