Monday, June 22, 2026

Elevated bacteria levels force beach closures


Elevated bacteria levels force beach closures

Kieran Sullivan


Beachgoers across the country are being met with warning signs instead of waves.

Elevated bacteria levels have forced closures and swimming advisories at popular beaches and lakes across numerous states in the U.S., raising concerns about water quality as the summer breaks into full swing.

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), beach closures occur when waters are contaminated with bacteria to prevent people and petsfrom getting ill.

"Swimming, diving or wading in water contaminated with fecal bacteria can result in gastrointestinal illness (such as diarrhea or vomiting), respiratory illness and other health problems," the EPA said. "Skin, ear, eye, sinus and wound infections can also be caused by contact with contaminated water."

Beach water pollution is often caused by stormwater runoff, leaking sewer infrastructure, pet waste, sewer overflows and failing septic systems.

The issue is impacting communities from coast to coast, with elevated bacteria levels prompting swimming advisories and beach closures in states ranging from New Jersey to Washington.

The city that never sleeps may have to stay on shore for now, as elevated bacteria levels trigger swimming advisories at several New York City beaches.

Swimming advisories were issued at several New York City beaches after water samples detected elevated levels of enterococci bacteria.

The affected sites were concentrated in several boroughs in the Big Apple, including in the Bronx, Queens and Brooklyn, as well as waterfront swimming areas along Long Island Sound and the city's southern coastline. 

Officials said the advisories were issued after testing found bacteria levels above state health standards, with stormwater runoff and aging sewer infrastructure often cited as contributing factors.

According to the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, 24 beachesclosed on Father's Day weekend, fencing off the public due to elevated levels of bacteria in the ocean.

Unfortunately, numerous beaches have closed due to the same issue, as cyanobacteria and an overabundance of other bacteria have invaded the state.

The closures span several popular coastal destinations, including Cape Cod communities such as Brewster, Plymouth and Provincetown, as well as North Shore beaches in Gloucester, Manchester, Rockport and Salem

Advisories were also issued at inland swimming areas in central and western Massachusetts, including locations in Natick, Pittsfield and Templeton, while several beaches in the Boston area, including sections of Constitution Beach in East Boston, were also affected.

In New Jersey, high fecal bacteria levels have triggered swimming advisories at eight New Jersey beaches and lakes, with one being completely shut down by environmental officials. 

According to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP), health officials test approximately 195 ocean and 25 bay stations along the coast each week. These samples are analyzed for Enterococci—a bacteria found in human and animal waste that serves as an indicator of poor water quality.

While Enterococci bacteria themselves usually do not cause illness, their presence acts as a warning sign that more dangerous viruses or bacteria could be lurking in the water. 



Trump Threatens New Strikes If Iran Fails to Rein in ‘Proxies’ in Lebanon


Trump Threatens New Strikes If Iran Fails to Rein in ‘Proxies’ in Lebanon
Sputnik 


US President Donald Trump threatened Iran on Sunday with further strikes if Tehran failed to persuade pro-Iranian groups in Lebanon to stop "causing trouble." 

"Iran must immediately stop their highly paid PROXIES in Lebanon from causing trouble. If they don’t, we’ll hit Iran very hard again, just like we did last week, only harder!!" Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Overnight into June 18, Iran and the United States remotely signed the memorandum that provides for an end to the military conflict that began on February 28. The document also sets timelines for the US to lift its naval blockade and for Iran to restore shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.
Iran also commits not to acquire nuclear weapons, with the issue of Iran's nuclear program to be resolved through a separate agreement. The parties will hold negotiations on this matter within 60 days. For Tehran, the outcome should be the lifting of anti-Iran sanctions.


ALPRs are a tool of the police state to track your every move


ALPRs are a tool of the police state to track your every move


Every time you pull out of your driveway, you probably still harbour the illusion that you are a free person going about your business. The reality is far more grim: your vehicle is bleeding data into a massive, unregulated dragnet the moment you pass the neighbourhood entrance. Automated Licence Plate Readers (“ALPRs”) and Flock cameras have infested our communities, quietly transforming the American landscape into an open-air panopticon.

You are no longer just a traveller; you are a heavily tracked data point in a system designed to treat every peaceful citizen as a suspect. The apologists for the police state are always quick to play the devil’s advocate when these surveillance grids face public scrutiny. They will breathlessly point out that ALPRs do sometimes help law enforcement track the plates of a stolen car or a violent suspect.

Police departments and the corporate salesmen hawking this gear parade these isolated victories in front of gullible city councils to justify millions in taxpayer funding. We are constantly told that solving a fraction of property crimes requires us to surrender our basic human dignity and privacy. But this statist narrative entirely ignores the tyrannical caveat that makes the whole operation illegitimate.

For every single actual criminal apprehended, the daily movements of tens of thousands of peaceful, innocent people are meticulously logged, tracked and stored in massive databases. You have committed no crime, yet the State knows exactly when you dropped your kids off at school, which doctor you visited and what political rally you attended. It is a pre-emptive strike by a paranoid ruling class against the very people they claim to serve.

According to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, these automated systems do much more than just read numbers on a bumper. They capture the time, date and precise coordinates of every passing vehicle, storing this highly sensitive location data for months or even years. This allows law enforcement to retroactively hit “rewind” on anyone’s life without ever setting foot inside a courtroom to obtain a warrant.

The American Civil Liberties Union (“ACLU”) has thoroughly documented how this dragnet operates, revealing that the overwhelming majority of people swept up in these databases are completely innocent of any wrongdoing. Despite this glaring fact, the data is pooled and shared across thousands of jurisdictions, essentially creating a national tracking system operated by private entities.

Taxpayers are literally being extorted to fund the infrastructure of their own surveillance.

Nefarious corporate groups, like Flock Safety, are getting extraordinarily wealthy from this unconstitutional model. They sell fear to local politicians and walk away with lucrative contracts, deepening their network of unlawful data collection as we have consistently covered here at The Free Thought Project. The public is forced at gunpoint to foot the bill for a corporate-state partnership that actively violates their inherent rights.

This panopticon is being built piecemeal through thousands of localised contracts quietly approved by city councils, police departments and even private homeowner associations. Flock Safety alone has embedded itself in over 6,000 municipalities, operating a staggering network of more than 80,000 cameras nationwide to indiscriminately log the movements of peaceful people.


The financial windfall generated by this unconstitutional dragnet is nothing short of extortionary. Weaponising the public’s fear of crime, Flock Safety has ballooned into an $8.4 billion empire, siphoning massive amounts of wealth directly from the taxpayers they are constantly monitoring. With local governments shelling out up to $3,500 per camera annually, this corporate-state partnership raked in over $300 million in recurring revenue by early 2025. The public is literally being forced under the threat of state violence to finance their own digital incarceration, enriching corporate entities while fundamental rights are casually discarded.

To grasp the true, dystopian scale of this operation, consider that these private systems are performing over 20 billion scans of vehicles across the country every single month.

They have successfully privatised the police state, transforming the basic, unalienable right to travel into an endless and highly profitable data extraction industry. We are witnessing the systematic abolition of privacy in real-time, orchestrated by corporate profiteers and rubber-stamped by local politicians who view citizens as nothing more than trackable data points. 

No wonder these people want to build hundreds more data centres despite already having more data centres than the next 14 top countries combined.

There is a monumental difference between being casually observed in passing and being subjected to algorithmic, permanent surveillance by a government apparatus. Under even the most basic principles of liberty, tracking and building a digital dossier on a peaceful person who has harmed no one is an inherently aggressive, hostile act. It violates the core tenets of a voluntary society by treating existence itself as a suspicious activity requiring constant monitoring.

Brazilian Parents Sentenced to 50 Days in Jail for Homeschooling Their Girls


Brazilian Parents Sentenced to 50 Days in Jail for Homeschooling Their Girls



A judge in Brazil has sentenced a mother and father to prison for 50 days because they homeschool their children, accusing them of "intellectual neglect" and failing to teach them "tolerance and diversity."  

Audato and Ieda Denardi began homeschooling their daughters, Alice, 15, and Lorena, 11, in São Paulo, Brazil, during the pandemic in 2020 after recognizing shortcomings in their public schools' remote-learning programs.

In doing so, they joined about 75,000 homeschooling families in Brazil. Little did the couple know their choice could cost them their freedom. 

The Denardis saw homeschooling as a caring parental choice intended to give their daughters the best education possible; however, Brazilian state prosecutors viewed it as an administrative offense for failing to register the children in a formal, state-accredited school.

The judge, despite being advised by the prosecutor in the case to acquit the family, convicted and sentenced them, making the Denardis the first to be criminally prosecuted for homeschooling children. 

The judge accused them of "using their daughters as pawns in an ideological struggle ... while completely excluding the State's involvement." 

Alliance Defending Freedom International is helping the Denardis to appeal the ruling. 

"The prosecutor examined the witnesses and recommended for acquittal. An independent educational psychologist found no sign of neglect. The girls themselves described rigorous daily education. The judge convicted anyway – because a 15-year-old said she finds some music lyrics morally questionable, and because the curriculum didn't include state-approved content on gender," said Julio Pohl, Legal Counsel for Latin America at ADF International. 

Although the parents were taken aback by the troubling conviction, Ieda and Audato still have hope that the courts will change their verdict.

"As a mother, I cannot conceive a more dictatorial state than the one that wants me in jail because I chose to exercise my right to direct the education and upbringing of my daughters. My husband and I are hopeful the court will recognize our right to choose the best education for our children and overturn this unjust conviction," Ieda said. 

Amidst the legal ambiguity and increased consequences, now including imprisonment, homeschooling parents are fighting for educational freedom. Legal organizations like ADF International are providing legal support for prosecuted families like the Denardis.

"A parent has been sentenced to prison not for failing to educate her children, but for educating them according to her own values. This is a grotesque abuse of the criminal law, and we will not let it stand," Pohl said.


First round of US-Iran talks ends with 60-day roadmap toward final deal, mediators say


First round of US-Iran talks ends with 60-day roadmap toward final deal, mediators say
ynet


Qatar and Pakistan said Monday that the first round of high-level talks between the United States and Iran had concluded in Switzerland with “encouraging progress,” including a 60-day roadmap toward a final agreement and new mechanisms meant to prevent escalation in the Strait of Hormuz and Lebanon.

The talks at the Qatari-owned Bürgenstock resort followed a tense opening in which Tehran said it had again restricted maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz and U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to resume attacks on Iran if it tried to close the waterway.

The Lake Lucerne Summit was held under the framework of the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding and included representatives from Iran, the United States and the two mediating countries, Qatar and Pakistan. A U.S. official said Vice President JD Vance took part in the talks with Iranian officials.

n a joint statement, Qatar and Pakistan said the talks were conducted in a “positive and constructive atmosphere” and had produced “encouraging progress,” including the creation of a mechanism for further technical negotiations.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman said separately that the work of the negotiating delegation had concluded, but that technical teams would continue their discussions, according to Iranian state and semi-official media. He said a text issued by Qatar and Pakistan would outline the general points agreed during 18 hours of talks and would be presented as the document of understandings reached in Switzerland.

According to the joint statement, the parties agreed to establish a High-Level Committee to provide political oversight of the mediation. Chief negotiators will report regularly to the committee and lead working groups focused on nuclear issues, sanctions, monitoring and dispute resolution, as well as other matters related to implementing the memorandum.

The committee also agreed on a roadmap aimed at reaching a final deal within 60 days, laying the groundwork for the immediate start of additional technical talks.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the “tireless” mediation by Pakistan and Qatar had delivered major progress toward ending the war in Lebanon. He said oil and petrochemical exports had received waivers, the blockade had been lifted, some frozen Iranian assets had been released and a major reconstruction and development plan for Iran had been launched.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman said the sides discussed the basis for beginning negotiations toward a final agreement and that “good progress” had been made in Switzerland, according to IRNA and Press TV.
The mediators said the parties had also agreed to open a communication line to avoid incidents and miscommunication, with the goal of ensuring safe passage for commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz.


The strait, a key choke point for global energy shipments, had become a central point of dispute before the talks. Iran said it had restricted traffic because the United States had failed to ensure a halt to fighting in Lebanon, while U.S. officials disputed that the waterway had been closed. Commercial shipping data cited in the report showed five vessels passed through the strait on Sunday, down from 26 a day earlier.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman confirmed that safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz had been discussed and that the sides agreed to arrange a mechanism.

The joint statement also said the parties agreed to create a de-confliction cell involving the negotiating parties and Lebanon, facilitated by the mediators, to ensure adherence to the termination of military operations in Lebanon under the memorandum.

The talks were held against the backdrop of continued violence in Lebanon despite a new ceasefire announcement Friday. Trump warned Iran on social media to stop its “proxies in Lebanon from causing trouble,” saying the United States would strike Iran again if it did not rein them in. Vance, however, said Trump had asked U.S. officials to “turn over a new leaf” in relations with the Iranian people.
Technical talks are expected to continue at Bürgenstock for the remainder of the week.
Qatar and Pakistan said they would continue working to ensure that negotiations proceed in a constructive atmosphere, with the goal of reaching a final deal. The mediators also expressed appreciation to the United States and Iran for what they described as their commitment to diplomacy and a peaceful resolution of the conflict.