The New York Times: Γιατί ο Μπάιντεν εγκατέλειψε την κούρσα – ομιλίες του Προέδρου Μπάιντεν και του Μπέντζαμιν Νετανιάχου, και οι προετοιμασίες για τους Ολυμπιακούς του Παρισιού – Το κρέας που καλλιεργείται στο εργαστήριο της Σιγκαπούρης – Γιατί ο Μπάιντεν παραιτήθηκε – Ο Νετανιάχου απευθύνεται στο Κογκρέσο – Το Παρίσι μεταμορφώνεται για τους Ολυμπιακούς Αγώνες – Ιταλία: Οι αρχές στη Σικελία εργάζονται για να σώστε την τουριστική περίοδο από μια από τις χειρότερες ξηρασίες της περιοχής εδώ και δεκαετίες – Το κρεοπωλείο Huber στη Σιγκαπούρη διαφέρει από τα άλλα κρεοπωλεία: Το κρέας που πουλάει καλλιεργείται σε εργαστήριο – Μια πανδημική σειρά για τους έχοντες και τους μη

President Biden speaking from his desk in the Oval Office.
“Nothing — nothing — can come in the way of saving our democracy,” President Biden said from the Oval Office. “That includes personal ambition.” Pete Marovich for The New York Times

Why Biden stepped down

In a brief prime-time address from the Oval Office, President Biden said he had abandoned his re-election bid despite believing that his record and his leadership merited a second term. He declared that it was time for “new voices, fresh voices — yes, younger voices” led by a new generation of leadership in America.

“I revere this office, but I love my country more,” he said in his first speech since passing the torch to Kamala Harris, now the Democrats’ presumptive nominee. “Nothing — nothing — can come in the way of saving our democracy. That includes personal ambition.”

Biden did not directly address the concerns about his age and his health that led him to quit the race. Instead, he pledged to keep working on foreign and domestic policy, seeking to advance his agenda for the next 180 days, even as a lame-duck president.

Donald Trump: The former president described Harris as a “radical-left lunatic” who would destroy the country, called her “Lyin’ Kamala” and repeatedly mispronounced her first name.

Harris campaign: The vice president continued an energetic sprint around the country, saying that Trump wanted to return America to a “dark past.” Here’s a timeline of how she locked down her party’s nomination in just 48 hours.

Trump assassination attempt: The F.B.I. director said the gunman had researched John F. Kennedy’s assassination and flown a drone near the Trump rally site before the shooting.

Benjamin Netanyahu speaking from a lectern. Behind and above him are two men in suits and an American flag.
In his speech, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described Israel’s war in Gaza as part of a larger conflict between Iran and the U.S. Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Netanyahu addresses Congress

In Washington yesterday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a full-throated defense of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza and angrily pushed back on criticism of its conduct of the war, which has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians. “We’re not only protecting ourselves,” he said in an hourlong address, “we’re protecting you.”

Netanyahu, who described the war as part of a larger conflict between Iran and the U.S., did not discuss the status of cease-fire talks with Hamas that have been underway for weeks. Here are six takeaways from the speech.

The war has eroded a longstanding bipartisan consensus to back Israel in Congress. Dozens of Democratic members boycotted the speech, and the standing ovations Netanyahu received were mostly partisan. Republicans applauded loudly, and Democrats hung back.

Outside: More than 5,000 pro-Palestinian demonstrators massed near the Capitol, some wearing Palestinian kaffiyehs, chanting for the U.S. to stop arming Israel and calling Netanyahu a “war criminal” and the “prime minister of genocide.”

Related: Britain’s new government is likely to withdraw objections to the International Criminal Court prosecutor’s pursuit of a warrant for Netanyahu’s arrest, edging away from the stance of the U.S., its closest ally.

A jogger runs along a shaded bank of the Seine.
The Summer Games’ opening ceremony will take place on the Seine, not in a stadium. Dmitry Kostyukov for The New York Times

Paris is transformed for the Olympics

The heart of Paris has fallen silent in preparation for the 2024 Summer Games’ opening ceremony tomorrow.

The ceremony, the first ever held outside the secure confines of a stadium, will float through the city on the Seine. It will depict 12 scenes from French history, intermingled with a parade of 10,000 athletes in boats.

The city’s security measures have thinned tourist crowds to a trickle and hurt businesses. Eleven million visitors are expected, down from earlier predictions of 15 million.

For more: “A city that has seen it all.” Let Roger Cohen, our Paris bureau chief, take you on a tour.

In other news from the Games:

The tennis star Coco Gauff will be the flag-bearer for Team USA.France has promised an unusually heavy blanket of security for Israeli athletes. In its first test, it pulled out all the stops.Jannik Sinner, the world’s top-ranked male tennis player, has withdrawn from the Games with tonsillitis.Salt Lake City will host the Winter Games in 2034.
MORE TOP NEWS
A goat farmer herding goats on a dry landscape.
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
Italy: The authorities in Sicily are working to save the tourism season from one of the region’s worst droughts in decades.Ukraine: The country’s top diplomat met with China’s foreign minister yesterday, a sign of Kyiv’s increased willingness to seek a diplomatic solution to the war.Media: Rupert Murdoch is locked in a secret legal battle with three of his children as he tries to preserve a conservative editorial bent in his media empire.Climate: Sunday was the hottest day recorded on Earth — until Monday.Cold cases: Nashville reopened investigations into three unsolved bombings during the civil rights era after a local author identified possible suspects.Germany: The authorities banned the Islamic Center Hamburg, accusing it of supporting Hezbollah and acting as a front for Iran.New Zealand: A commission of inquiry estimated that more than 200,000 people had been abused while under the care of state and religious organizations from 1950 to 2019.Royals: Profits from the Crown Estate, which oversees the British royal family’s land and property holdings, doubled as a result of deals with offshore wind power producers.

News From Asia

Taiwan: Typhoon Gaemi made landfall after killing at least six people in the region.Nepal: A plane crashed while taking off from an airport in Kathmandu, killing 18 people.North Korea: Balloons loaded with trash and launched across the border hit a symbolically significant target: the South Korean president’s office.
SPORTS NEWS
Soccer: During his 25 years as commissioner, Don Garber has helped Major League Soccer thrive in the U.S.Golf: Could Xander Schauffele be chosen as PGA Tour player of the year over Scottie Scheffler?
MORNING READ
A shopper reaching into a refrigerator. A sign reads, “The world’s first cultivated meat.”
Ore Huiying for The New York Times

Huber’s Butchery in Singapore is different from other butchers: The meat it sells is grown in a lab.

The city-state, which has very little land to farm and imports 90 percent of its food, has become a world leader in “cultivated meat.” Its success could have global significance.

ARTS AND IDEAS
In a scene from the show, a group of people in medieval dress stand in front of an old stone wall. One holds a bird of prey.
Netflix

A pandemic series about haves and have-nots

Set against the background of the Black Death, “The Decameron,” a new Netflix series loosely based on a 14-century book by Giovanni Boccaccio, is a comedy about a group of nobles who try to escape the plague by taking refuge in a villa, some with their servants.

Kathleen Jordan, the showrunner, was inspired by the coronavirus pandemic — particularly by various instances of “tone deafness in celebrity culture,” she said. At the time, some starlets in multimillion-dollar mansions said they felt like they were in prison, while frontline emergency workers struggled to save lives.

The resulting show is a soapy tale of romance and intrigue that delivers edge-of-your-seat plot twists with a dark sense of humor. Read more about the series.

RECOMMENDATIONS
Peaches in a pie crust.
Johnny Miller for The New York Times

Bake: A press-in graham cracker crust makes this peaches and cream pie stand out.

Antonis Tsagronis
Antonis Tsagronis
Αντώνης Τσαγκρώνης  Αρχισυντάκτης: Αtticanews.gr  iNews – Newspaper – iRadio - iTV e-mail : editor@atticanews.gr , a.tsagronis@gmail.com AtticaNews Radio:  http://www.atticanews.gr Facebook: @Αντώνης Τσαγκρώνης Facebook: @Atticanews.gr https://www.facebook.com/Atticanewsgr-111129274130/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/Antonis%20Tsagronis Twitter: #AtticanewsGr Instagram:Antonis_Tsagronis (διαπιστευμένος δημοσιογράφος στο Προεδρίας της Δημοκρατίας, Υπ. Εξωτερικών, Υπ. Πολιτισμού & Αθλητισμού, Υπ. Παιδείας και Θρησκευμάτων, Υπ. Τουρισμού, Υπ. Υγείας, , Yπ. Εργασίας & Κοινωνικών Υποθέσεων, Υπ. Προστασίας του Πολίτη, Υπ. Μετανάστευσης και Ασύλου)

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