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The Rise and Fall of Ukraine’s Fertilizer King

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motherjones.com

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newsletters@motherjones.com

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Sun, Dec 1, 2019 06:07 PM

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IT'S NOT TOO LATE! A subscription to Mother Jones makes a perfect holiday gift. For all your friends

IT'S NOT TOO LATE! A subscription to Mother Jones makes a perfect holiday gift. [And at just 12 bucks for a full year, the price is right.]( For all your friends and relatives who share your values and your appreciation for hard-hitting investigative journalism. Or for that #MAGA brother-in-law who needs a dose of reality. You’ll not only be giving them food for thought—you’ll be adding fuel to our fire, too. As you probably know, Mother Jones is a reader-supported, nonprofit news organization. We depend on subscribers—and gift-givers—to help us spread the word. All the more reason to bring your friends, relatives, and close associates on board. [So share Mother Jones this season. Act now!]( --------------------------------------------------------------- [Food for Thought] December 1, 2019 [Food for Thought]( [The Rise and Fall of Ukraine's Fertilizer King]( The story of Dmitry Firtash illustrates the power of crony capitalism in shaping the economies of post-Soviet Russia and Ukraine—the atmosphere of big money and lax regulation that made the milieu of Russian President Vladimir Putin so [irresistible]( [to Trump]( and his own cronies. ([Mother Jones]() Garbage in. Bacon out. ([Mother Jones]() The pope might make destroying the earth a sin. Will Catholics listen? ([Grist]() Here's what to say to racist family members during the holidays. Pretty much all of us have them. ([Mother Jones]() Is high-risk romaine here to stay? Yet another outbreak. ([The New Food Economy]() "It's not you, it's me. Pass the olives?" Here's the least terrible way to break up with someone in a restaurant. ([Eater]() —Advertisement— One Great Tidbit The Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture is hosting its Young Farmers Conference on December 4 and 5—and you're invited! Watch Mother Jones' Tom Philpott and Maddie Oatman discuss storytelling and the state-led fight for healthy soils with farmers and experts from around the country, via [the free livestream](. New From Bite Podcast Silicon Valley's tech companies are all competing for talent, and offering employees perks like free breakfast, lunch, and dinner. And all those free meals create a lot of leftovers. One organization aims to redirect that food away from the landfill and into the mouths of people in need. Ride along with Mother Jones' Marisa Endicott and Les Tso, a driver for Food Runners, as he rescues uneaten grub and delivers it to the far corners of the city. Then, two New Mexico farmers have a different strategy for dealing with leftovers: converting it into bacon. Hear it on Bite, episode 98: "[The Leftovers](" Hungry for more food news? Follow Mother Jones Food on [Twitter]( and [Facebook](, and find all of our food stories at [www.motherjones.com]( Did someone forward this to you? [Click here]( to sign up to get more Food for Thought in your inbox! —Advertisement— Food for Thought comes to you from Mother Jones, an award-winning, investigative journalism outlet that was founded as a nonprofit magazine in 1976. [Donate]( [Subscribe to Mother Jones]( This message was sent to {EMAIL}. To change the messages you receive from us, you can [edit your email preferences]( or [unsubscribe from all mailings](E2%80%8B). For advertising opportunities see our online [media kit](. Were you forwarded this email? [Sign up for Mother Jones' newsletters today](. [www.MotherJones.com]() PO Box 8539, Big Sandy, TX 75755

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