
Climate change effects 'can begin in the womb' warns New York Times opinion piece, pushes for govt. action
Fox News
An opinion piece in The New York Times said climate change legislation was needed because a study found kids who went through hurricanes had elevated anxiety.
"The study’s authors found that boys who were exposed to Sandy in the womb had elevated risks for "attention-deficit/disruptive behavioral disorders," while girls had elevated risks for anxiety disorders, depressive disorders and phobias," Grose wrote. Kristine Parks is an associate editor for Fox News Digital. Read more.
The columnist searched for solutions to the problem since climate change wasn’t "going away anytime soon — even if humanity suddenly got our collective act together and started doing more to ameliorate it— and pregnancies will continue to coincide with hurricanes, tornadoes and floods."

Pizza before tomatoes? Ancient Rome's version of America's favorite food looked nothing like today's
Ancient Rome pizza at Hungary restaurant features no tomatoes or mozzarella, using garum fish sauce and olive paste. Neverland Pizzeria's dish is limited-edition.












