
-
De Minaur says Australia ready to snap Davis Cup title drought
-
Pacific Islands leaders kick off summit clouded by China tensions
-
Obese surpass undernourished youths for first time, UN warns
-
US Supreme Court to hear Trump tariff case in November
-
NBA Bulls re-sign Australian guard Giddey
-
Former Meta researchers testify company buried child safety studies
-
Trump issues rare rebuke to Netanyahu over Qatar strikes
-
US stocks close at fresh records, digesting weak jobs data
-
Bolsonaro on brink of conviction in Brazil coup trial
-
England set the standard with Serbia rout: Tuchel
-
Trump ready to match EU tariffs on China, India to pressure Putin: US official
-
Hong Kong legislature to vote on same-sex partnerships bill
-
Unconvincing France come from behind to edge Iceland in World Cup qualifying
-
England thrash Serbia, Haaland stars in World Cup qualifying
-
Sparkling England crush Serbia to ignite Tuchel's reign
-
Portugal edge Hungary in World Cup qualifying thriller
-
Trump issues rare rebuke to Netanyahu over Qatar strike
-
Cape Verde close to World Cup debut after beating Cameroon
-
Ganguly's Pretoria team lands big-hitting Brevis for record price
-
Apple's move to eSIM-only strengthens global trend
-
Macron names close ally Lecornu new PM
-
Afghanistan thrash Hong Kong in Asia Cup opener
-
Deadly Israeli strikes targeting Hamas in Qatar earn Trump rebuke
-
Pacific Islands leaders hold summit clouded by China tensions
-
Tedesco replaces Mourinho as Fenerbahce coach
-
Macron names defence minister Lecornu new PM: presidency
-
US unveils new health plan avoiding curbs on junk food, pesticides
-
Rotting body found in US rapper's Tesla in Hollywood
-
First of five judges in Bolsonaro coup trial votes to convict
-
Barca's Camp Nou not ready to host Valencia game
-
Stocks climb eyeing US rate cut, political turbulence
-
Concert cancellations just made us bigger, say Kneecap
-
Tedesco replaces Mourinho as Fenderbahce coach
-
Brazil's Supreme Court begins voting in Bolsonaro coup trial
-
Vuelta hit by protests again, Bernal wins stage
-
McIlroy takes Federer advice to avoid golf boredom
-
Israel strikes Hamas officials in Qatar
-
French fear diplomatic stitch-up over Bayeux Tapestry loan
-
Nepal protesters set parliament ablaze as PM quits
-
Russian attack kills 24 in Ukraine during pension distribution
-
Stocks climb as US rate cut hopes counter political shakeups
-
Romo abandons Vuelta after protest crash incident
-
Bayrou resigns as French PM, Macron seeks successor
-
Ethiopia inaugurates Africa's biggest dam, drawing Egyptian protest
-
Brazil's Supreme Court begins voting in Bolsonaro verdict
-
Miners Anglo American, Teck to forge copper giant
-
ICC hears harrowing details as Kony war crimes hearing opens
-
Russia kills 21 in east Ukraine during pension distribution, Zelensky says
-
Aid flotilla activists say determined to reach Gaza despite 'drone attack'
-
EU clamps down on food waste, fast fashion
RBGPF | 2.38% | 77.27 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.08% | 24.37 | $ | |
SCS | -2.01% | 16.88 | $ | |
NGG | -0.09% | 70.36 | $ | |
JRI | 0.36% | 13.78 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.12% | 24.14 | $ | |
BCE | -0.79% | 24.2 | $ | |
RELX | -0.25% | 47.19 | $ | |
GSK | 1.79% | 40.78 | $ | |
RIO | -2.99% | 61.87 | $ | |
BTI | 0.12% | 56.26 | $ | |
BCC | -4.37% | 85.29 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.89% | 14.65 | $ | |
AZN | -0.42% | 81.22 | $ | |
BP | 0.53% | 34.09 | $ | |
VOD | 0.51% | 11.86 | $ |

US unveils new health plan avoiding curbs on junk food, pesticides
US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Tuesday unveiled the Trump administration's long-awaited plan to tackle chronic disease, calling for better nutrition, tighter scrutiny of medical advertising, and even a new push to boost fertility.
Conspicuously absent, however, were proposals to directly restrict ultra-processed foods or pesticides -- long priorities of Kennedy's Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement -- omissions viewed as wins for the food and agriculture industries.
"The administration is trying to have it both ways," Scott Farber, vice president of the nonprofit Environmental Working Group, told AFP, criticizing what he called the vagueness of the "Make Our Children Healthy Again" strategy, a follow-up to an initial assessment published this spring.
"In May, they described a hellscape of junk food and toxic exposures that put all our children at risk. In September, they are calling for more studies and plans and proposals."
The new 20-page report highlights many of Kennedy's signature causes: reviewing fluoride in drinking water, revisiting childhood vaccine schedules and expanding parental opt-outs, and raising doubts about antidepressants.
Many of these positions sit well outside mainstream medicine, particularly on vaccines.
Other eye-catching ideas include a MAHA fertility education campaign -- reflecting right-wing anxieties over declining birth rates -- and a call to probe "electromagnetic radiation," apparently a reference to cellphone use, though it is not spelled out.
The first report was widely ridiculed after it was found to contain numerous fabricated citations, apparently from using AI tools.
- Thin on specifics -
The new paper avoids that pitfall by omitting citations altogether. But critics said it was largely thin on specifics, even for areas that enjoy broad consensus, such as tackling America's junk-food addiction.
One section calls for a government-wide definition of ultra-processed foods, without saying what should follow. "This is such an opportunity. I sure wish they had taken it," Marion Nestle, professor emeritus of nutrition at New York University, told AFP.
Likewise, it seeks to increase oversight for violations of drug advertising laws -- though in the past Kennedy had called for an outright ban and some had hoped the administration would push for such a regulation.
On the use of pesticides, the report on the one hand evokes the possible use of "precision technology" to "decrease pesticide volumes" — while elsewhere it calls for deregulation to help bring "chemical and biologic products to protect against weeds, pests, and disease" to market faster.
It comes as President Donald Trump's Environmental Protection Agency is proposing to bring a new wave of pesticides to market despite experts warning the proposed chemicals constitute harmful so-called "forever chemicals."
Similarly, even as the MAHA report urges higher birth rates, the EPA's weakening of air-pollution standards risks undermining fertility, given the well-established harms of contaminants to sperm and egg health.
"This is taking gaslighting to a new level," said Farber.
Q.Najjar--SF-PST