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This Happened

This Happened—November 18: Jim Jones Leads 918 To Death

During a time filled with a myriad of cults, the People's Temple massacre became the largest cult mass killing as Jim Jones led 918 people to death by cyanide poisoning.

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What was Jonestown?

Jim Jones established Jonestown in 1974 and began a mass exodus of his cult, the Peoples Temple, to a fertile patch of land in the country of Guyana. Jones was a Christian Socialist from Indiana with political ties in the U.S. who admired the likes of Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin, as well as Mahatma Gandhi.

In Jonestown, Jones hoped to avoid American investigations into his affairs as a cult leader and a Soviet sympathizer.

What caused the Jonestown massacre?

Jones’ mental and physical health rapidly declined after moving to Jonestown, where he began abusing different hard drugs and told his supporters that he had lung cancer. Increasingly fearful of a fascist insurrection, Jones began preparing the members of the Peoples Temple to commit mass suicide, even running drills called White Nights.

With Jonestown’s resident doctor, Jones began stockpiling mass quantities of cyanide poison, waiting for the right moment to come. While many committed suicide, there is no way of knowing how many people were forced to ingest cyanide at Jonestown. In the end, 918 people died, including Jones with a self-inflicted gunshot. The 304 children among the victims, forced to take the poison, were no doubt murder victims.

What happened Jonestown after the massacre?

The area where Jonestown was located has seen some development since the massacre, but it remains difficult to access. There are no roads to Jonestown from Guyana's capital of Georgetown, and commercial air travel is available only on a limited schedule.

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Society

Italy's Right-Wing Government Turns Up The Heat On 'Gastronationalism'

Rome has been strongly opposed to synthetic foods, insect-based flours and health warnings on alcohol, and aggressive lobbying by Giorgia Meloni's right-wing government against nutritional labeling has prompted accusations in Brussels of "gastronationalism."

Dough is run through a press to make pasta

Creation of home made pasta

Karl De Meyer et Olivier Tosseri

ROME — On March 23, the Italian Minister of Agriculture and Food Sovereignty, Francesco Lollobrigida, announced that Rome would ask UNESCO to recognize Italian cuisine as a piece of intangible cultural heritage.

On March 28, Lollobrigida, who is also Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's brother-in-law, promised that Italy would ban the production, import and marketing of food made in labs, especially artificial meat — despite the fact that there is still no official request to market it in Europe.

Days later, Italian Eurodeputy Alessandra Mussolini, granddaughter of fascist leader Benito Mussolini and member of the Forza Italia party, which is part of the governing coalition in Rome, caused a sensation in the European Parliament. On the sidelines of the plenary session, Sophia Loren's niece organized a wine tasting, under the slogan "In Vino Veritas," to show her strong opposition (and that of her government) to an Irish proposal to put health warnings on alcohol bottles. At the end of the press conference, around 11am, she showed her determination by drinking from the neck of a bottle of wine, to great applause.

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