5 reasons to value the American alligator

There are good reasons to celebrate May 29 as National Alligator Day, say researchers.

American alligators are one of the largest beneficial predators that have stood the test of time balancing ecosystems. Yet, they’re largely misunderstood.

“Often sensationalized, these iconic reptiles are recognized by biologists and ecologists as indicators of ecosystem health that can signal environmental changes,” says Venetia Briggs-Gonzalez, a senior research biologist at the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences’ Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center (FLREC) and a member of The Croc Docs.

American alligators are found across the Southern United States, drawing attention throughout the year. In Florida, the Everglades, freshwater lakes, marshes, swamps, rivers, and canals teem with alligators.

“As humans, we enjoy a love-and-fear relationship with American alligators because they symbolize strength and survival, among other desirable qualities,” says Sergio Balaguera-Reina, a research scientist at FLREC and member of The Croc Docs. “We celebrate and raise awareness of these modern-day archosaurs because of their critical roles and the need for continued conservation efforts.”

The Croc Docs offer these five key insights on what American alligators tell us and why we should appreciate them:

1. Alligators are ecosystem engineers

They dig holes, making ponds in marshes that retain water as the surrounding marsh dries out. “This behavior provides a home for other aquatic species and food for predators such as large fish, wading birds, otters, and alligators,” says Frank Mazzotti, professor of wildlife ecology at FLREC who leads The Croc Docs.

2. Alligator survival isn’t guaranteed

Human interference and water management practices designed to support a growing human population have created habitat loss and altered wetland quality. “This has had a direct impact on alligator populations. Research tells us that American alligators in Florida are growing slower, surviving less, and have reduced their reproductive output in areas of disturbance,” said Balaguera-Reina.

3. Alligators are good indicators of habitat restoration

Because alligators are doing so poorly in the Everglades, we expect them to respond positively to ecosystem restoration informing us of restoration progress.

4. Alligators can eat invasive species

Alligators can prey on invasive species but are sometimes preyed upon by Burmese pythons. Their ability to control invasive species will depend upon populations sizes and colocation.

5. Gators are smart and curious

Did you know that alligators are less aggressive than many other species of crocodylians? Their ability to remember things like sources of food is surprisingly well developed. If they see movement in the water, they will approach the source simply because they are curious. Always respect their space.

Source: University of Florida

source

Cyprus takes extra measures to ensure air safety amid Turkish warplane incursions

Cyprus authorities say they’re taking extra efforts to ensure flight safety isn’t compromised from Turkish warplanes and military drones flying inside Cypriot-monitored airspace without filing either flight plans or communicating with air traffic control.

The issue over unregulated Turkish military flights again came to the fore earlier this month when Cypriot authorities said a Turkish warplane “illegally” flew low over a United Nations-controlled buffer zone that cuts across the ethnically-divided island nation on what was believed to be a surveillance mission.

“Despite these illegal acts by Turkey, and the illegal operation of the self-styled air traffic control by the secessionist entity, the Department of Civil Aviation of Cyprus is doing its utmost to ensure the safe provision of air traffic services within the Nicosia FIR in its entirety,” the Cyprus government told The Associated Press late Wednesday.

Despite the International Civil Aviation Authority recognizing the Cyprus government as the sole air traffic authority within the island’s 67,567-sq. mile Flight Information Region (FIR), Turkish Cypriots have declared their own airspace in the north and direct flights in and out of an airport in the north that saw a combined 23,224 arrivals and departures last year.

PARALYZED MAN REGAINS THIS ‘SIMPLE PLEASURE’ THANKS TO AI ‘DIGITAL BRIDGE’

Europe Fox News graphic

Cyprus is taking extra efforts to ensure their air safety amid Turkish warplane incursions.  (Fox News)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

But passenger jets traversing Cyprus’ FIR have received differing flight instructions, leading to “confusion and misunderstanding” among pilots although the risk of an accident is extremely remote, according to Europe’s air safety agency.

In the past, there have been a number of instances where aircraft got dangerously close to one another as a result of these contradictory instructions.

Turkey doesn’t recognize Cyprus as a state and is the only country to recognize a breakaway Turkish Cypriot state in the island’s northern third. Turkish Cypriots declared independence nearly a decade after a 1974 Turkish invasion triggered by a coup aiming at union with Greece.

Turkey also maintains a sizeable military force and numerous military installations in the north, including an airfield from which military drones are known to operate.

Turkish Cypriot authorities insist that there are “two sovereign states” on Cyprus “where each has effective control over their own territory, including their airspace.” In a statement to the AP, they accuse Cypriot government authorities of being “confrontational” and of issuing “potentially misleading instructions” to pilots while calling for “dialogue and cooperation.”

source

Shaq gets served — again — in FTX lawsuit


New York
CNN Business
 — 

After months of cat and mouse, lawyers for a group of FTX investors have served Shaquille O’Neal. Again.

Plaintiffs’ attorneys say O’Neal has repeatedly dodged process servers who have been trying to hand-deliver legal complaints related to his role as a celebrity spokesperson for the cryptocurrency platform FTX, which collapsed late last year and is now the subject of a massive federal investigation.

The 7-foot-1 NBA hall-of-famer and commentator is one of several celebrities accused of defrauding investors by appearing as a spokesperson for FTX, though he is the only one who has tried to dodge being served, according to lawyers for the plaintiffs.

“It seems absurd to have to go to such great lengths to serve Mr. O’Neal,” said Adam Moskowitz, a lawyer representing FTX investors.

The delivery finally happened, Moskowitz said, on Tuesday night, outside of the Miami venue formerly known as FTX Arena.

Lawyers for O’Neal didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Last month, it seemed as if the chase was finally over after Moskowitz said his firm’s process servers reached O’Neal as he was leaving his home in Georgia in an SUV. O’Neal’s lawyers disputed that in court, however, arguing that papers thrown at a moving vehicle run afoul of the requirements for serving a summons, the Wall Street Journal reported.

For the latest effort, the process server filmed the event to ensure there was no ambiguity, Moskowitz said. The server delivered the FTX complaint as well as a a separate proposed class-action case related to Astrals Project, O’Neal’s non-fungible tokens venture. The second lawsuit, filed Tuesday, alleges O’Neal sold unregistered securities.

The FTX lawsuit, filed in November, accuses the bankrupt company’s co-founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, along with several public figures who endorsed the platform — including O’Neal, Tom Brady, Gisele Bundchen and Steph Curry — of defrauding investors.

Moskowitz called O’Neal’s supposed evasive maneuvering a “silly service sideshow” that has held up the legal process for thousands of FTX investors.

O’Neal has seldom spoken publicly about his role in FTX, though he told CNBC in December that he was “just a paid spokesperson for a commercial.”

FTX collapsed into bankruptcy on November 11 after depositors and investors yanked their money amid concerns about the platform’s balance sheet. Since then, federal prosecutors have charged Bankman-Fried and several other executives with orchestrating one of the biggest financial frauds in US history.

Bankman-Fried, who was arrested in December and is out on house arrest, has pleaded not guilty to 13 counts of fraud and conspiracy. At least three of his former co-workers have pleaded guilty and are cooperating with investigators.

source

Cheating spouses may not feel guilty

An extensive survey of people using Ashley Madison, a website for facilitating extramarital affairs, challenges widely held notions about infidelity.

Married people who have affairs through the site find them highly satisfying, express little remorse, and believe the cheating didn’t hurt their otherwise healthy marriages, according to the paper in the journal Archives of Sexual Behavior.

“In popular media, television shows and movies and books, people who have affairs have this intense moral guilt and we don’t see that in this sample of participants,” says lead author Dylan Selterman, an associate teaching professor in Johns Hopkins University’s department of psychological and brain sciences.

“Ratings for satisfaction with affairs was high—sexual satisfaction and emotional satisfaction. And feelings of regret were low. These findings paint a more complicated picture of infidelity compared to what we thought we knew.”

Researchers conducted this study to better understand the psychological experiences of those who seek and engage in extramarital affairs. Working with researchers at the University of Western Ontario, Selterman surveyed nearly 2,000 active users of Ashley Madison before and after they had affairs.

Participants were asked about the state of their marriage, about why they wanted to have an affair, and about their general well-being. Respondents, generally middle aged and male, reported high levels of love for their partners, yet low levels of sexual satisfaction.

Participants reported high levels of love for their spouses, yet about half of the participants said that they were not sexually active with their partners. Sexual dissatisfaction was the top-cited motivation to have an affair, with other motivations including the desire for independence and for sexual variety. Fundamental problems with the relationship, like lack of love or anger toward a spouse were among the least-cited reasons for wanting to cheat.

Having great marriages didn’t make cheaters any more likely to regret affairs, the survey found. Participants generally reported that their affair was highly satisfying both sexually and emotionally, and that they did not regret having it.

The results suggest that infidelity isn’t necessarily the result of a deeper problem in the relationship, Selterman says. Participants sought affairs because they wanted novel, exciting sexual experiences, or sometimes because they didn’t feel a strong commitment to their partners, rather than because of a need for emotional fulfillment, the report found.

“People have a diversity of motivations to cheat,” Selterman says. “Sometimes they’ll cheat even if their relationships are pretty good. We don’t see solid evidence here that people’s affairs are associated with lower relationship quality or lower life satisfaction.”

Selterman hopes to advance this work by looking closer at how other populations of cheaters compare to the Ashley Madison population.

“The take-home point for me is that maintaining monogamy or sexual exclusivity especially across people’s lifespans is really, really hard and I think people take monogamy for granted when they’re committed to someone in a marriage,” Selterman says.

“People just assume that their partners are going to be totally satisfied having sex with one person for the next 50 years of their lives but a lot of people fail at it. It doesn’t mean everyone’s relationship is doomed, it means that cheating might be a common part of people’s relationships.”

Source: Johns Hopkins University

source

Alex Murdaugh indicted in alleged $4M insurance theft in housekeeper's death, other financial schemes

A federal grand jury on Wednesday indicted convicted murderer Alex Murdaugh on 22 counts of fraud stemming in part from an alleged scheme to steal some $4 million in insurance settlement funds from his housekeeper’s family.

The disgraced South Carolina lawyer now faces more than 100 alleged financial crimes, which began in 2005, stemming from various indictments.

“Trust in our legal system begins with trust in its lawyers,” U.S. Attorney Adair F. Boroughs said in a Wednesday statement. “South Carolinians turn to lawyers when they are at their most vulnerable, and in our state, those who abuse the public’s trust and enrich themselves by fraud, theft, and self-dealing will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

Federal prosecutors on Tuesday also accused Murdaugh’s longtime friend, Cory Fleming, of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in the apparent theft of nearly $4 million in insurance fees.

A man looks on inside a courtroom.

Alex Murdaugh, pictured here, and Cory Fleming allegedly worked together to deposit dozens of forged settlement checks into a fraudulent Bank of America account named “Forge,” apparently after Forge Consulting, LLC, an insurance advisory company. (Andrew J. Whitaker/The Post and Courier/Pool)

Fleming, a suspended lawyer and Murdaugh’s college roommate, on Wednesday agreed to plead guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in South Carolina District Court.

The charging document filed Monday alleges that Fleming worked with Murdaugh to deposit forged settlement checks into a fraudulent Bank of America account named “Forge,” apparently after Forge Consulting, LLC, an insurance advisory company.

ALEX MURDAUGH CLAIMS HE LIED ABOUT DOGS CAUSING HOUSEKEEPER GLORIA SATTERFIELD’S FATAL TRIP AND FALL

Murdaugh and Fleming allegedly stole $3.8 million from Nautilus Insurance Company and $500,000 from Lloyd’s of London that should have gone to the family of Murdaugh’s deceased housekeeper, Gloria Satterfield.

A close up of Alex Murdaugh tearing up.

Alex Murdaugh cries in court at his double murder trial in Walterboro, South Carolina, on on Feb. 22, 2023. (Grace Beahm Alford/The Post and Courier/pool)

Satterfield died after a fall at Murdaugh’s home in 2018, and he was accused of stealing an insurance settlement that was intended for her children.

Satterfield’s son, Tony Satterfield, testified during Murdaugh’s murder trial that his family never received a penny from the $4 million settlement funds. The Satterfield family has a $4.3 million judgment against Murdaugh, which he voluntarily signed. 

“At Richard Alexander Murdaugh’s direction, [Fleming] issued checks made payable to ‘Forge’ totaling $3,483,431.95. Richard Alexander Murdaugh deposited the funds into his ‘fake Forge’ account, knowing that the funds belonged to the Estate of G.S., and thereafter used the funds for his personal enrichment,” the complaint states.

ALEX MURDAUGH SAYS PRISON CONDITIONS MAKE IT HARD TO DEFEND AGAINST SATTERFIELD LAWSUIT

“The Estate of G.S. did not receive any of the settlement funds,” federal prosecutors wrote.

Gloria Satterfield and Alex Murdaugh

Gloria Satterfield, left, worked as a housekeeper and a nanny at the Murdaugh home for two decades. (Brice Herndon Funeral Home/AP)

Satterfield apparently tripped and fell on the front steps at the Murdaughs’ home on their South Carolina hunting estate, Moselle. Satterfield died days later in a hospital, and an autopsy was never conducted. Her death certificate said she died of natural causes, which her family and Hampton County Coroner Angela Topper later disputed because her injuries were inconsistent with that conclusion.

“Today has been a great day for justice in South Carolina related to the ongoing criminal investigations into Alex Murdaugh and Cory Fleming,” Satterfield family attorneys Eric Bland and Ronald Richter said in a statement, adding that Fleming “has agreed to provide cooperation to the federal authorities, and Dick Harpootlian has indicated that Alex Murdaugh has been cooperating with the United States investigation for some time.”

MURDAUGH FALLOUT: HOUSEKEEPER GLORIA SATTERFIELD’S SONS ‘WANT JUSTICE’ IN LAWYER’S ALLEGED FINANCIAL CRIMES

“While it is said that Lady Justice is blind, she is not a sucker. Bottom Line — Can’t run or hide from justice,” Bland and Richter said.

The South Carolina Law Enforcement Division has opened an investigation into Satterfield’s death.

Murdaugh has been accused of stealing millions from his former personal injury law firm, The Parker Law Group, formerly known as Peters, Murdaugh, Parker, Eltzroth and Detrick.

Gloria Satterfield and her son, Tony Satterfield

The South Carolina Law Enforcement Division has opened an investigation into Gloria Satterfield’s death. (Eric Bland)

The Parker Law Group is still in the process of repaying all the clients Murdaugh stole from, as Parker Law Group CFO Jeanne Seckinger testified during the disgraced lawyer’s murder trial in February.

Murdaugh was found guilty in the June 2021 murders of his wife, Maggie, and youngest son, Paul, at his family’s estate in Islandton.

ALEX MURDAUGH’S PRISON LOVE LETTERS: ‘I THINK ABOUT YOU ALL DAY’ 

Lead prosecutor Creighton Waters repeatedly asked Seckinger why the firm had to pay back each client.

“Because Alex Murdaugh stole it,” Seckinger said of forged checks presented as evidence in a Colleton County courtroom. She also identified Murdaugh’s handwriting on the checks.

Alex Murdaugh is escorted into the courthouse wearing a tan prison jumpsuit.

Alex Murdaugh is led into the Colleton County courthouse wearing a tan prison jumpsuit in Walterboro, S.C., on March 3, 2023. Murdaugh was found guilty on all counts of murdering his wife and son. (Mark Sims for Fox News Digital )

On June 7, 2021, she confronted Murdaugh and told him she had reason to believe he received hundreds of thousands of dollars in missing fees directly, and he needed to prove he had not. 

Murdaugh in turn said the money was in a trust, and the check for the missing funds had not been cut to the firm yet.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The former lawyer abruptly received a call at that same time saying his father was back in the hospital, and his condition was terminal, ending his conversation with Seckinger.

Prosecutors alleged during his murder trial that Murdaugh killed his wife and son in an effort to veer attention away from his alleged financial crimes. 

“We are grateful to the FBI for their tireless work on this case and to the South Carolina Attorney General’s Office and the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division for their work to hold Alex Murdaugh, and those who enabled him, accountable in our state system. We remain committed to doing our part to further that effort in the federal system,” Boroughs said Wednesday.

Fox News’ Rebecca Rosenberg contributed to this report.

source

How you can prepare for a debt default


New York
CNN
 — 

With barely a week to go before the United States defaults on its debt for the first time in history, the White House and congressional leaders remain far apart on any deal.

Failing to raise the debt ceiling would wreak havoc across the US economy and Americans’ personal finances.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Tuesday told a closed-door meeting that “we are nowhere near a deal,” according to sources. A default could affect everything from Social Security payments to the flow of money across the world.

But even in the face of a possible, never-before-seen global economic crisis, there are steps Americans can take to protect themselves from some of the effects.

Here’s how you can prepare for a potential debt default.

The roughly 66 million retirees, disabled workers and others who receive Social Security benefits should brace themselves for potential delays in their monthly checks.

Many of these folks depend heavily on these funds to cover their living expenses, including food, rent, utilities and health care. The average benefit for retired workers is $1,827 a month in 2023.

Almost two-thirds of beneficiaries rely on Social Security for half of their income, and for 40% of recipients, the payments constitute at least 90% of their income, according to the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare.

“Beneficiaries have earned their benefits through a lifetime of hard work and they rely on their benefits,” Max Richtman, the committee’s CEO, wrote to lawmakers last month. “These payments are at risk of not being paid on time or in full for the first time in our nation’s history.”

However, it’s possible the Treasury Department could continue making on-time payments because of the entitlement program’s trust fund, said Shai Akabas, director of economic policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center.

The benefits are disbursed four times a month, on the third day of the month and on three Wednesdays. Roughly $25 billion a week is sent out, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Some Department of Defense workers may see their paychecks delayed — including 1.4 million active-duty members of the military and more than 2 million federal civilian workers. Federal government contractors could also see a lag in payments, which could affect their ability to compensate their workers, CNN previously reported.

Military families should make sure they have extra money and that their emergency funds are topped off to weather a missed paycheck, Mike Hunsberger, owner of Next Mission Financial Planning and an Air Force veteran, told CNN. For those with thin budgets, Hunsberger suggested looking again to see if there’s anything else to cut back on, at least temporarily.

Every military service has an organization that can help with temporary loans for those who could be in a crunch — think a car breaking down or an emergency ticket home for a family death, Hunsberger said. Some military-facing banks could also be of assistance.

Those who receive veterans benefits should also have an emergency stockpile prepared — disability payments and pensions for some low-income veterans and their surviving families could be affected by a default.

Bond investors should expect volatility even during deal negotiations. US Treasuries are considered to be the world’s safest assets because they are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States, but the uncertainty over a debt ceiling deal adds risk.

With Treasuries, the key question is when investors will be repaid, not if.

Experts assume that even if the United States briefly goes past the X-date, it will be resolved quickly and the government will make good on its obligations, CNN reported.

If you invest in bonds, pay attention to when your Treasury bills are maturing.

Those who have invested in Treasury bills maturing on or right after June 1 and who definitely need their money at that time — for example, to pay their own bills — might consider selling those bills now and reinvesting in bills that mature sooner, Collin Martin, director and fixed income strategist at the Schwab Center for Financial Research, suggested in an interview with CNN.

And for those into bond funds, check to see that the bond portion of your portfolio has adequate exposure to intermediate and longer-term bonds, rather than being too heavily weighted toward short-term higher yielding bonds.

Steer clear of corporate junk bonds or emerging market bonds, CNN has previously reported. That’s because if the US does default, high-risk debt instruments will come under the most pressure.

“If you need to borrow money, you need the confidence of the markets to lend to you,” Martin said.

“Our general guidance is for investors to maintain a balanced portfolio in keeping with their goals and to remain disciplined. A long-term view is especially important during periods of uncertainty,” Vanguard spokesperson Jessica Schifalacqua said previously told CNN.

Stocks could shed as much as a third of their value even if an agreement is reached, erasing $12 trillion in household debt, Moody’s Analytics said.

Review your equity-to-bond allocation and make any necessary adjustments, Martin advised. Stocks, which are riskier investments than bonds, will probably get more volatile as the deadline date approaches, CNN has reported.

If the US does default, it has to then be resolved, experts say. And when it does, there will be a “relief rally” in the market, Callie Cox, eToro US investment analyst, previously told CNN.

However, there could be an immediate correction period after a deal is reached as the Treasury replenishes the cash it burned through when it couldn’t borrow money, Michael Reynolds, vice president of investment strategy at Glenmede, told CNN.

Investors may be tempted to buy the dip, but there are “so many other pressures weighing on the economy,” Cox said.

“You don’t want to get over-invested with a recession on the horizon,” Reynolds said. In his view, it’s only worth taking advantage of a market sale if the S&P 500 dips below 16% of its current value.

Short-term investors should be even more cautious, experts said.

source

Patients are split on getting health care from artificial intelligence

About 52% of participants in a new study would choose a human doctor rather than AI for diagnosis and treatment.

Artificial intelligence-powered medical treatment options are on the rise and have the potential to improve diagnostic accuracy.

The findings in PLOS Digital Health, however, show that most patients aren’t convinced the diagnoses provided by AI are as trustworthy as those delivered by human medical professionals.

“While many patients appear resistant to the use of AI, accuracy of information, nudges, and a listening patient experience may help increase acceptance,” says Marvin J. Slepian, professor of medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine-Tucson, of the study’s other primary finding: that a human touch can help clinical practices use AI to their advantage and earn patients’ trust.

“To ensure that the benefits of AI are secured in clinical practice, future research on best methods of physician incorporation and patient decision making is required.”

For the study, the researchers placed participants into scenarios as mock patients and asked whether they would prefer to have an AI system or a physical doctor for diagnosis and treatment, and under what circumstances.

In the first phase, the researchers conducted structured interviews with actual patients, testing their reactions to current and future AI technologies. In the second phase of the study, the researchers polled 2,472 participants across diverse ethnic, racial, and socioeconomic groups using a blinded, randomized survey that tested eight variables.

Overall, participants were almost evenly split, with more than 52% choosing human doctors as a preference versus approximately 47% choosing an AI diagnostic method. If study participants were prompted that their primary care physicians felt AI was superior and helpful as an adjunct to diagnosis or otherwise nudged to consider AI as good, the acceptance of AI by study participants on re-questioning increased. This signaled the significance of the human physician in guiding a patient’s decision.

Disease severity—leukemia versus sleep apnea—did not affect participants’ trust in AI. Compared to white participants, Black participants selected AI less often and Native Americans selected it more often. Older participants were less likely to choose AI, as were those who self-identified as politically conservative or viewed religion as important.

The racial, ethnic, and social disparities identified suggest that differing groups will warrant specific sensitivity and attention as to informing them as to the value and utility of AI to enhance diagnoses.

“I really feel this study has the import for national reach. It will guide many future studies and clinical translational decisions even now,” Slepian says. “The onus will be on physicians and others in health care to ensure that information that resides in AI systems is accurate, and to continue to maintain and enhance the accuracy of AI systems as they will play an increasing role in the future of health care.”

Additional coauthors are from the University of Texas at Arlington, the James E. Rogers College of Law, the University of Utah, and the University of Arizona.

The National Institutes of Health funded the study.

Source: University of Arizona

source

Target holds 'emergency' meeting over LGBTQ merchandise in some stores to avoid ‘Bud Light situation’

FIRST ON FOX – Some southern Target stores were forced by the corporation to move LGBTQ Pride merchandise away from the front of their locations after customer “outrage” to avoid a “Bud Light situation.”

Many Target locations across the country feature massive June Pride month displays on an annual basis, with items this year ranging from “tuck friendly” bathing suits for transgender people to mugs that say “gender fluid.” But the retail juggernaut has been criticized by some conservatives for the displays, with children’s items particularly irking many customers. 

A Target insider told Fox News Digital that many locations, mostly in rural areas of the south, have relocated Pride sections to avoid the kind of backlash Bud Light has received in recent weeks after using a transgender influencer in a promotional campaign. 

CONSUMERS CREEPED OUT BY TARGET’S ‘TUCK-FRIENDLY’ WOMEN’S SWIMWEAR: ‘SHOPPING ELSEWHERE’

Target in Palmdale, California

Some southern Target stores were forced by the liberal corporation to move LGBTQ Pride merchandise away from the front of the store after customer “outrage.” (Google Maps)

A Target insider said there were “emergency” calls on Friday and some managers and district senior directors were told to tamp down the Pride sections immediately. 

“We were given 36 hours, told to take all of our Pride stuff, the entire section, and move it into a section that’s a third the size. From the front of the store to the back of the store, you can’t have anything on mannequins and no large signage,” the Target insider said. 

“We call our customers ‘guests,’ there is outrage on their part. This year it is just exponentially more than any other year,” the Target insider continued. “I think given the current situation with Bud Light, the company is terrified of a Bud Light situation.” 

The insider, who has worked at the retailer for almost two decades, said Target rarely makes such hasty decisions. They said Friday’s call began with roughly 10 minutes on “how to deal with team member safety” because of the amount of backlash the Pride merchandise has generated, noting that Target Asset Protect & Corporate Security teams were present on the call. 

Pride swimsuit

Target Pride swimsuits boast “tuck-friendly construction” and “extra crotch coverage,” presumably to accommodate male genitalia, even if they are made in an otherwise female style. (Brian Flood/Fox News)

TARGET-PRIDE-COLLECTION-TAG

Many Target locations across the country feature massive June Pride month displays on an annual basis. (Brian Flood/Fox News)

“The call was super quick, it was 15 minutes. The first 10 minutes was about how to keep your team safe and not having to advocate for Target. The last five was, ‘Move this to the back, take down the mannequins and remove the signage,’” the insider said, noting that bathing suits have replaced Pride merchandise in front-of-store displays despite Pride month not even starting until June 1. 

“It’s all under the guise of trying to increase swim sales,” the insider said. “Everyone was like, ‘Thank God,’ because we’re all on the front lines dealing with it.” 

Target did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

BUD LIGHT IN ‘SERIOUS TROUBLE’ OF LOSING STATUS AS TOP-SELLING BEER IN US, INDUSTRY EXPERT WARNS

Fox News Digital has confirmed rural Target stores in South Carolina, Arkansas and Georgia are among the locations to move the Pride sections. Most rank-and-file employees were left in the dark, with many not knowing the Pride sections would be moved until they noticed it themselves. 

Pride merchandise remains prominently displayed at other locations and on the Target website.  

Target Pride merchandise includes female-style swimsuits that can be used to “tuck” male genitalia. Some products are also labeled as “Thoughtfully fit on multiple body types and gender expressions.” 

Pride merchandise also includes onesies and rompers for newborn babies, a variety of adult clothing with slogans such as “Super Queer,” party supplies, home décor, multiple books and a “Grow At Your Own Pace” saucer planter. 

INFLUENTIAL TRANS CARE DOCTOR ONCE WARNED PUBERTY BLOCKERS COULD CAUSE PERMANENT SEXUAL DYSFUNCTION

TARGET-PRIDE-COLLECTION-KIDS

Target has been criticized by conservatives for the over-the-top Pride displays, with children’s items particularly irking many customers.  (Brian Flood/Fox News)

TARGET-PRIDE-COLLECTION-MUGS

Target Pride merchandise includes “Gender Fluid” mugs and “Grown At Your Own Pace” saucer planters.  (Brian Flood/Fox News)

Bud Light sales have plummeted since backlash to the infamous partnership with transgender activist Dylan Mulvaney continues to haunt the company more than a month since it came to light. The issue began when Mulvaney publicized that the beer company sent packs of Bud Light featuring the influencer’s face as a way to celebrate a full year of “girlhood.” Mulvaney is one of many social media influencers Bud Light has tapped to promote the brand.

Mulvaney said the cans were her “most prized possession” on Instagram with a post that featured “#budlightpartner.” A video then featured Mulvaney in a bathtub drinking a Bud Light beer as part of the campaign. Some consumers mistakenly thought the cans with Mulvaney’s face were being sold to the public.

“Bud Light learned an important lesson about wading into the culture wars recently. But partnering with Dylan Mulvaney is nothing compared to what Target is doing,” conservative pundit and author Bethany Mandel tweeted. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Fox News’ Hanna Panreck contributed to this report. 

source