P.S. please forgive the occasional typo. These articles are written at breakneck speed using Dragon Dictate. I have to prepare them in around 20 mins. Also, sources for news articles are carefully selected but the news is often not independently verified. And, I rely on scientific studies but they are not 100% reliable. Finally, (!) I often express an OPINION on the news. Please share yours in a comment.
Monday, 6 April 2026
Trump has already lost the Iranian war he chose to start
P.S. please forgive the occasional typo. These articles are written at breakneck speed using Dragon Dictate. I have to prepare them in around 20 mins. Also, sources for news articles are carefully selected but the news is often not independently verified. And, I rely on scientific studies but they are not 100% reliable. Finally, (!) I often express an OPINION on the news. Please share yours in a comment.
PM Starmer ready to accept animal cruelty to get closer to EU
Foie Gras and Fur Production in the EU
Foie gras and animal fur remain legal industries within the European Union, even though both involve practices widely criticised for causing animal suffering. Foie gras is produced mainly in France, along with smaller operations in Spain, Hungary and Bulgaria. The process relies on force‑feeding ducks or geese to enlarge their livers far beyond normal size. This method, known as gavage, is banned in several EU countries on welfare grounds, but the EU single market rules mean the product itself cannot be banned from sale. France, in particular, treats foie gras as part of its cultural heritage and strongly defends its production.
Fur farming has been banned in a growing number of EU states — including the Netherlands, Austria, Belgium and Italy — but fur sales and imports remain legal at EU level. Countries that still farm fur, such as Finland, continue to export it freely within the single market. The EU has not introduced a bloc‑wide ban on fur products, despite public pressure and citizen‑led initiatives calling for one.
The result is a patchwork: some EU countries prohibit the production of foie gras or fur, but none can block their sale. As long as these products remain legal at EU level, they continue to circulate freely across the union.
The price of working closer with the EU
The UK government are now ready to drop a promise to ban imports of animal fur and foie gras in order to secure a deal with the EU to enable the UK to work more closely with the continent. Foie gras was banned in the UK 20 years ago. To accept imports is a big step backwards.
The EU are not prepared it seems to make the imports of these animal cruelty products an exception for the UK.
The trouble is that the UK have to accept EU standards even if they are lower than UK standards in the area of animal welfare.
Frankly this makes me angry. Animal welfare is often de-prioritised by politicians because it gets in the way of economic progress. It always will because exploiting animals is good business.
Who 'owns' a domestic cat? Or does anyone?
In the village of Augicourt in eastern France, a domestic cat has become the subject of a legal dispute between two women, each claiming ownership. Aimée Raclot says she found the animal, which she named Pompon, abandoned and in poor health in her barn. She paid for veterinary treatment and later had the cat microchipped in her own name. A neighbour, however, insists the cat is hers, called Flocon, and supports her claim with earlier veterinary records. She has filed a complaint alleging theft, prompting police involvement and legal proceedings. The case is now heading towards mediation. At its core, the dispute raises a familiar legal tension between possession and care on the one hand, and prior ownership on the other. While Raclot emphasises the rescue and welfare of the cat, the neighbour maintains that original ownership should prevail. The outcome will depend on how the competing evidence is assessed under French law.
Sunday, 5 April 2026
When Hegseth Makes War Sound Like a Crusading Video Game
That is why Pope Leo’s Palm Sunday message hit so hard. He said, “God does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war.” It was a simple sentence, but it cut straight through the noise. Prayer is not meant to bless killing. It is not meant to make violence feel righteous. It is meant to achieve the opposite.
When someone uses prayer to ask for better killing, they are not talking to God — they are trying to use God. And that is a dangerous thing. God - if he existed - would grimace at such attempts at prayer.
The tragedy becomes even clearer when you look at the other side. While American officials pray for victory, young men in Iran kneel on their prayer rugs and ask God for the same thing. Two nations, two faiths, one God — and each convinced that the other must be defeated. It becomes a mirror image: each side praying for the success of its weapons, each side believing it is righteous, each side asking God to help it kill. Nothing about that is holy.
Nothing about that is sane. And yet Hegseth apparently ardently believes everything he says in prayer to his God. It demonstrates - as far as I am concerned - that he is a slightly (greatly?) deranged person. And a very dangerous person.
Trump is not dissimilar. They both have borderline personality disorders which is probably why Trump appointed Hegseth who incidentally insisted on being titled 'Secretary of War' not of defence. Note: an executive order authorised “Department of War” and “Secretary of War” as secondary, non‑statutory titles for communications. This did not replace the legal name — it simply allowed the terminology to appear in messaging. Hegseth seized on this immediately.
The real problem is the way war is being imagined. When leaders talk about killing with excitement instead of sorrow, war becomes easier to start and harder to stop. The language becomes simple, clean, and thrilling, while the reality is bloody, messy, and full of grief. Once war is spoken of like entertainment, the human cost disappears from view.
That is why Pope Leo’s warning matters. He is trying to pull the moral weight back into the room. He is reminding everyone — leaders, soldiers, citizens — that war is not a show, not a game, and not a place to look for spiritual excitement. It is a place of suffering. And anyone who forgets that is already lost.
End of toxic chemicals in Britain's sofas which will protect companion animals
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