Categories
US

‘No more car for me’: will a $23 toll finally rid Manhattan of gridlock? | New York

Could a moonshot policy finally rid the nation’s most congested city of its incessant, noisy, polluting traffic? Soon, over a million drivers a day could be forced to cough up as much as $23 to enter midtown and lower Manhattan – a toll that planners say will raise $15bn to fund New York public transit while cutting vehicles in the area by as much as one-fifth.

Among the cars that would be leaving the streets of Manhattan is a white Honda Accord that was parked on East Broadway in the Lower East Side on Wednesday.

“If they add even more fees, then that’s it,” said Felicita Mercado as she stepped into the vehicle. “No more car for me.”

Instead, the 77-year-old lifelong New Yorker said, she will start taking the bus.

The plan is called congestion pricing, and New York City is poised to become the first city in the United States to implement it. Similar policies have long been in place in cities including Singapore, which has had congestion pricing since 1975, and London, where a congestion charge has been in place since 2003. But in New York, a city synonymous with gridlock, the policy struggled to overcome opposition for decades before it was finally signed into law in 2019.

On Wednesday, transportation authorities released a much-awaited environmental assessment for the policy, an important milestone that explains how the plan will affect the city. “Bottom line: congestion pricing is good for the environment, good for public transit and good for New York and the region,” said the Metropolitan Transit Authority’s (MTA) chair and CEO, Janno Lieber, in a statement.

Public transportation advocates are calling it a long-awaited victory. “This is a massive deal for all New Yorkers,” said Danny Harris, the head of Transportation Alternatives, a nonprofit that has fought for the policy. “There’s not a corner of the city that isn’t negatively impacted by our car-first policies. This is a big step for not being so car-centric that reduces the number of people who drive and increases the amount of people who take other sustainable modes to get around.”

people walk through station as train is at platform
New York’s Penn Station subway stop in April. Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images

Manhattan is an island connected to its neighbors by a network of bridges, tunnels, train routes and ferries. An estimated 7.7 million people enter Manhattan’s central business district every weekday – twice the population of Los Angeles, according to the report. Of those people, just under a quarter – or 1.85 million – enter in a motor vehicle. All that traffic has slowed travel speeds to an agonizing crawl: from an average of 9.1 mph in 2010 to just 7.1 mph in 2019. That costs the average New York City driver 102 hours of lost time every year.

Meanwhile, the public trains and buses used by the majority of commuters are in dire need of upgrades. Many of the MTA’s railroads and subway tracks are more than a century old and require billions of dollars in repairs. Studies have found that most of the city’s bus routes – which are especially important for the city’s lower-income residents – are excruciatingly slow and unreliable. And ridership numbers have worsened dramatically since the pandemic, amid fears of Covid and crime.

That dynamic has produced enthusiasm for congestion pricing among residents of lower Manhattan.

“There’s too many people driving in for no good reason,” said one Chinatown bike shop owner, who declined to be named. “They’re not coming in for work, they’re not coming in to do anything specific – they’re just driving because they’re lazy or they’re afraid of the subway. It just sucks that people are driving behaviors that are unnecessary and also destroying our infrastructure, which is causing cascades of other problems in the city.”

“I fully-throatedly support strong congestion pricing on private cars,” said Ben Eckersley, a 31-year-old lifelong Manhattan resident who lives on the Lower East Side. “We have a public transit system that is only designed to get in and out of Manhattan from every borough. The fact that people use lower Manhattan as a pass-through location to get to New Jersey is bogus. The local pollution problems it causes, the traffic problems it causes, are outrageous. We just don’t have the infrastructure for it.”

The new study offers policymakers a number of tolling scenarios, with peak-hour tolls ranging from $9 to $23 per vehicle. In some scenarios, vehicles such as taxis and transit buses and would be exempt from the toll completely, while some other vehicles would be charged the toll a maximum of once a day. In another scenario, vehicles including taxis, rideshare vehicles, trucks and buses could be hit with the congestion charge every time they enter or re-enter the zone in a given day.

Residents of the congestion area making less than $60,000 a year will be eligible for a tax credit to make up for the cost of the tolls, and emergency vehicles and vehicles carrying people with disabilities will be exempt from the tolls, according to the 2019 law.

people walk on london street near double decker bus
A congestion charge sign is displayed in London in October, shortly before the city expanded its ultra-low-emission zone. Photograph: Hollie Adams/Getty Images

The reward to all residents of the area should be noticeably less traffic and cleaner air. The study projects that the number of vehicles in the area each day will decrease between 15.4 to 19.9%. Harmful airborne PM2.5 and PM10 particles, which have been shown to cause cancer, would be reduced by more than 11%.

New York’s policy does not go as far as London’s, where drivers who enter a designated “ultra low emissions zone” must pay a fee if their car doesn’t meet fuel efficiency standards. As of last year, that zone covers most of the British capital.

Harris, the public transportation advocate, praised New York’s toll as a first step toward recognizing driving’s true impact on society.

“The truth is, people have never had to pay the actual cost of driving because it’s been so incredibly subsidized,” he said, citing policies like the city’s millions of free street parking spots.

But the toll’s success also depends on whether the city can fast-track infrastructure for alternatives to driving, such as bikeshare docks, protected bike lanes and bus-only lanes, before the toll is formally implemented, he said. Congestion pricing shouldn’t be about “taking cars away from people”, he said, but about “providing options for you to get around.

“If you live in a community where you’re forced into a car, forced into car payments, and forced into wasting much of your life in traffic, it means your city and the car industry have continued to fail you. This is about giving people freedom from that.”

Categories
Technology

Samsung has this week launched the latest foldable devices in the Galaxy Z Series | Daily Liberal

Flip phones are back, but not as we’ve ever known them. Photo: Supplied

This is branded content for Samsung

Samsung Electronics has today delighted fans with the announcement of their latest generation of premium, foldable smartphones and wearables within the Galaxy Series.

The latest additions to the Galaxy family includes a range of Galaxy Watches, buds and the highly anticipated smartphones, featuring the latest foldable technology.

The Galaxy Flip4 and Galaxy Fold4 have been long awaited by eager and curious consumers, and they challenge everything preconceived about the possibilities of hand-held tech.

The Galaxy Flip4 features an upgrade thanks to a larger screen and enhanced performance, all with the unrivaled portability and style that Samsung is renowned for.

Available in 128GB, 256GB and 512GB and in four beautiful colours, including the iconic new Bora Purple, Pink Gold, Graphite and Blue, the Flip4 redefines the art of self-expression through a powerful design that slips right into your back pocket.

The Galaxy Flip4 retails from $1,499 and comes in either the base or Bespoke model, for a more personalized experience.

Its cousin in the Galaxy series, the Galaxy Fold4, pushes all limits in smartphone technology, pairing convenience with luxury where other manufacturers have compromised.

As one of Samsung’s most premium designs, the Z Fold4 provides the ultimate one-hand experience with a slim, reengineered hinge for the thinnest, lightest Galaxy Fold yet.

The Z Fold4 provides the ultimate one-hand experience with a slim, reengineered hinge for the thinnest, lightest Galaxy Fold yet. Photo: Supplied

The Galaxy Fold4 gives consumers the best of both worlds, with an extra large immersive screen to work with that folds in half, providing portability, and dual screen capabilities that allow for seamless integration between apps.

“The new Galaxy Z Series range is the generation of foldables that will see the category become mainstream. Adoption cues are steadily growing from the volume of foldable devices ‘in the wild’, increasing consumer online search trends, indication of purchase intent, app optimization and more,” said Garry McGregor, vice president of Mobile Experience division at Samsung Australia.

“We know there’s been a doubling in consideration for foldables among 18 to 45 year olds, and generation Z specifically showing a colossal 273% increase since last year.

“Without a doubt foldables have more than emerged, they’ve arrived and have a bright future.

“The foldables market is predicted to continue its rapid growth, more than doubling in 2023, and the fact Samsung Australia has maintained year-on-year pricing we see this being very much the case in this market,” said Mr McGregor.

The Galaxy Fold4 comes in Phantom Black, Beige or Greygreen and offers multiple memory options, with 256GB, 512GB and 1TB memory variants. The Galaxy Fold4 retails from $2,449, and both Z series smartphones are available for pre-order from August 11, 2022.

Samsung foldables are engineered to be strong, with Gorilla Glass Victus and aircraft-grade strength Armor Aluminum. Photo: Supplied.

But smartphones weren’t the only gadgets unveiled in the latest product lineup.

Samsung’s expanded Galaxy Watch 5 Series and Galaxy Buds2 Pro also made their Australian debut this week.

The Galaxy Watch5 Pro is a brand new addition to the range, with toughness and durability at its core. Made with the adventurous athlete in mind, it acts as the perfect sidekick to an active lifestyle. The Watch5 on the other hand, is a customizable addition to enhance everybody’s everyday life.

“We know there is a clear desire for an ecosystem of connected products. That is why we are especially excited for our latest additions to the Galaxy portfolio of wearables as well as the all new Watch5 Pro,” said Mr McGregor.

“They offer our customers supreme audio and improved health and well-being functionality – bringing the best of the best.

“It is a very exciting time for the category and with the full support from our partners, offering complete ranges of color skews, memory variants at the best value, we know our customers in Australia are going to love these new devices.”

Pre-orders for all devices begin on August 11, with on-sale launching on September 2. Retailers have various different pre-order offers, with fantastic savings to be made.

The Galaxy Z Series smartphones will be available from the Samsung eStore and Experience Stores, as well as all Samsung retail and telco partners.

For more information about the latest Samsung Galaxy devices, including the Z Series, visit https://www.samsung.com/au/smartphones/galaxy-z/

This is branded content for Samsung

Categories
Entertainment

Steve Martin says he will no longer ‘seek’ acting work, suggests retirement

Hollywood veteran Steve Martin has said he’s “not going to seek” any more acting work, adding, “This is, weirdly, it.”

The 76-year-old US actor, who has been a mainstay in film and television for more than five decades, said retirement is on the cards after he wraps filming on the upcoming third season of his breakout Hulu series, Only Murders In The Building, co-starring Martin Short and Selena Gomez.

In an interview with The Hollywood ReporterMartin suggested it was becoming difficult to stay in the game at the back-end of his career.

“There’s a time in your career when people are dying to see you… Now is the time in my career when I’m the one who’s got to show up,” he said.

Martin added: “When this television show [Only Murders In The Building] is done, I’m not going to seek others. I’m not going to seek other movies. I don’t want to do cameos. This is, weirdly, it.”

Martin, who is nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor (Comedy) at this year’s awards for his work on the series, made his name in showbiz in the ’60s for his writing work on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hourbefore becoming a host on Saturday night Live.

After retiring from stand-up comedy, Martin successfully transitioned to the big screen in the ’80s, going on to star in hit films including Three Amigos, Planes, Trains And Automobiles, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, LA Story, Father Of The Bride, Pink Panther and Cheaper By The Dozen.

Over the years he’s won five Grammys, an Emmy, and was awarded the Honorary Academy Award in 2013, meaning he only needs to win a Tony to achieve coveted EGOT status (where you have won an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony).

Martin retreated from the public eye throughout the 2010s, in which he occasionally featured in various projects, before his resurgence in 2020 in Father Of The Bride, Part 3(ish) and 2021’s only murdererswhich he created alongside John Hoffman.

On the personal front, Martin became a father for the first time at the age of 67, welcoming a daughter, Mary, with his wife of 15 years, Anne Stringfield.

While he did suggest he’d reached the end of his career, Martin also didn’t close the door completely.

“My wife keeps saying, ‘You always say you’re going to retire and then you always come up with something’ … I’m really not interested in retiring. I’m not. But I would just work a little less. Maybe,” he added.

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Categories
Sports

Jason Day leads Australian charge at $21m St Jude Classic

Former world no.1 Jason Day decided to ditch the “anxiety” that comes with worrying about outcomes and pushed himself into contention at the opening event of the FedEx Cup Playoffs where winning isn’t the only goal.

World No.2 Cameron Smith kept his cool amid a growing storm about his potential defection to Greg Norman’s Saudi-backed LIV Golf and declared he was ready to “cop some heat” for pre-tournament denials after his own solid opening round a the St JudeClassic.

In a sign interpreted by some as strengthening Smith’s reported $140 million LIV defection, the Australian was point-blank after his opening round of 67 about the continued questioning.

“I’m ready to cop some heat. I understand that’s what I’ve said,” Smith told Sky Sports having declared any news on a move would come from him.

“I’m here to win the FedEx Cup playoffs, that’s my number one goal. Whatever happens after that will come from me.”

But while Smith remains in focus Day, who withdrew from last week’s PGA Tour event with illness, carded a bogey-free round of 65 to sit just off the pace in a share of fifth late in the opening round at the $21m St Jude Classic , three shots behind the leaders.

Only the top 70 finishers will progress to the next event and remain in the hunt for the biggest payday in golf, outside of signing a LIV deal.

Day, who hasn’t won since 2018 and has slipped to 147th on the world rankings, said he wasn’t getting lost in thinking too far ahead.

“You’re always just trying like to just blend everything together and hopefully it will click,” Day said.

“I’m not getting too excited about anything right now, just got to stay patient as much as I can because the more and more I start thinking about outcomes and being able to get into next week, it just does nothing for me, or at least anything positive for me.

“It actually gives you more anxiety and a lot of other stuff that comes along with it.

“I feel pretty good about the opening round and looking forward to the rest of the week.”

Adam Scott was the next best Aussie at four-under, a score that could have been better if not for a double-bogey five on the par three 14th hole when his tee shot found the water.

Smith, who could assume the world No.1 ranking with a victory in Memphis, depending on where current world No.1 Scottie Scheffler finishes, carded an up-and-down opening round 67, which included an eagle and two bogeys, to be five off the lead.

Scheffler opening with a one-over par 71.

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Categories
Australia

John Barilaro inquiry reveals blurred lines between ministers, public servants

For the senior public servants who would have their emails, decisions and text messages pored over in full public view, the parliamentary probe into John Barilaro’s appointment to a plum New York trade role was not ideal. But it was, to use the words of the state’s top bureaucrat, utterly predictable.

They were right to be concerned. Over six weeks of evidence, the inquiry has prized open the internal machinations of the public service to lay bare the muddied line separating the state’s most highly paid public servants and the government ministers who can hire or fire them on a whim.

Witnesses in their evidence have proclaimed the lofty ideals of a government sector that operates without fear or favour. But lines of questioning have more often revealed political pressure and nervous bureaucrats.

Premier Dominic Perrottet was quick to distance himself from the hiring process.

Premier Dominic Perrottet was quick to distance himself from the hiring process.Credit:Kate Geraghty

“The relationship between politicians and the public service is a perennial challenge,” says Andrew Podger, a former senior bureaucrat and public service commissioner.

“Problems of excessive political pressure are occurring across jurisdictions and are not confined to one side of politics or the other… Clearly the head of Investment NSW felt constrained in exercising her authority, and pressure was known also to the head of the NSW Premier’s department. ”

But Investment NSW chief executive Amy Brown’s opening statement to the inquiry in June gave nothing away. “I am committed to the public sector core values ​​of integrity, trust, service and accountability. That includes the Westminster principle of an apolitical and impartial public service,” she said.

The process that appointed Barilaro was consistent with the government sector employment act, Brown insisted, and the independent Public Service Commissioner, who was on the hiring panel, would back her in on that fact.

Amy Brown giving evidence to the upper house inquiry in June.

Amy Brown giving evidence to the upper house inquiry in June.Credit:Janie Barrett

Brown appeared protective of Stuart Ayres, who was the relevant minister when she was promoted to secretary of the NSW Department of Enterprise, Investment and Trade without a recruitment process earlier this year.

“Minister Ayres … is very respectful of the public service and our processes and so he was very cautious about not having those sorts of conversations [about the appointment],” she said under questioning.

The early days of the saga exposed Brown and set her up to take the fall if required.

Premier Dominic Perrottet was quick to distance himself from the process. In question time in June, he emphasized Brown was the “final decision-maker” and the appropriate person to explain what went on. “It would not have been lawful for me as premier to intervene in any step of the process,” he told parliament.

Later that day he said: “If there were no good reasons behind the decision, I’ll take action.”

Stuart Ayres resigned as trade minister over his role in the recruitment process.

Stuart Ayres resigned as trade minister over his role in the recruitment process.Credit:Dominic Lorrimer

By the time of Brown’s second appearance, the department secretary was taking a different tone. It was six weeks later, but just hours after Ayres had resigned amid concerns about his involvement in the recruitment process that had emerged in a separate review Perrottet had commissioned.

She admitted the process that appointed Barilaro was not conducted at “arm’s length” from Ayres, who had told her within days of Barilaro’s application that the former deputy premier would make a good candidate.

While she maintained she was responsible for the decision, Brown confessed she “had some nervousness” about the ramifications.

That was when she sought advice from the department of premier and cabinet secretary, Michael Coutts-Trotter. Brown said she asked him in April whether there was “anything that you wish to tell me that would dissuade me from making that decision.” “I think he shrugged and said ‘no’,” she said.

Department of Premier and Cabinet Secretary Michael Coutts-Trotter.

Department of Premier and Cabinet Secretary Michael Coutts-Trotter.Credit:Dominic Lorrimer

In another exchange from May, when Brown told Coutts-Trotter by text that Barilaro would take on a plum New York trade role with the blessings of the premier and deputy premier, he responded with: “Righto”.

Brown said his replies did not imply that there was nothing to worry about. Rather, “it was more ‘I’m not going to tell you anything to stop it going ahead.’ Like, a bit as though he was resigned to it,” she told the inquiry.

Coutts-Trotter, an experienced bureaucrat, was Perrottet’s choice to lead the public service when he became premier. Information in the public domain has suggested he took a neutral role in Barilaro’s appointment of him; it is unclear whether he escalated Brown’s concerns to the premier.

Coutts-Trotter’s text to Brown – that the Labor probe was an “utterly predictable” outcome – was released this week as part of the inquiry, which has entered its seventh week and is ongoing.

Ministers who have worked with Brown regard her as intelligent, but there is a view that she was promoted too quickly, without the requisite experience for such a senior role.

Asked if Ayres’ interventions had put her or her agency in a difficult position, Brown said: “That’s fair.”

“It’s tough being a public servant at the best of times.”

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Much of Brown’s angst related to the back-and-forth surrounding the government’s desire to convert the trade roles from public service decisions to ministerial appointments.

The political uncertainty had a clear impact on Brown. She described it as both disheartening and disillusioning, and said it led her team to feel ministers did not have faith in their decision-making.

“I felt the need that I had to keep checking [with the minister] – partly because of this gray area that we were in around public service or ministerial. But, broadly speaking, I wanted to make sure he was comfortable,” she said.

Then, last week, the state’s public service commissioner Kathrina Lo weighed in. She was adamant that fear of controversy should never stymie an independent, merit-based selection.

Public Service Commissioner Kathrina Lo at the inquiry last week.

Public Service Commissioner Kathrina Lo at the inquiry last week.Credit:Kate Geraghty

But she, too, had lost faith in the process and even feared she was being used – by Brown or the hiring firm – as political cover.

Lo said she would not have signed off on Barilaro’s appointment if she knew “the degree of ministerial involvement, including input into shortlisting and provision of an informal reference” that had gone on behind the scenes.


Podger, now a professor of public policy, said the political arm of government had put pressure on what was ostensibly a public service decision.

“The public service must be responsive to the elected government. That’s part of the democratic principle: serve and be loyal,” he said. “But at the same time, it has to have a degree of independence, make appointments on merit, exercise law in an impartial way, be professional and expert.”

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He said striking the right balance was always an issue, but it has been made worse over the last 20 years with what he describes as “an army of political advisers controlling the way the public service operates”.

The inquiry has opened a window into that too: it heard Ayres’ office would meet weekly with Investment NSW and that the change in policy for the trade role appointment process – for which Investment staff provided advice – was managed by former Barilaro adviser Joseph Brayford.

Part of the picture also involves the fact department secretaries – whose pay packets at the top end are above $600,000 – are on term contracts and can be hired and fired by ministers at their discretion.

Podger said it meant top bureaucrats would often “pick and choose” when they stand up to a minister.

Colleen Lewis, a professor at the Australian Studies Institute at ANU, said it created a tension between political advisers – who have grown in number – and increasingly dispensable senior bureaucrats.

“There’s not a lot [the bureaucrat] can do – the ministry is their boss. What’s happening in terms of the relationships is that frank and fearless advice takes second priority to the advice from the ministerial adviser,” she said.

“We don’t want to go back to the days of the mandarins, who ran a particular government for 35 years and thought of it as their fiefdom, but we have to find a compromise.”

Top silk Geoffrey Watson, SC, a former counsel assisting the Independent Commission Against Corruption, who has represented former bureaucrat Jenny West in the inquiry, also said it was a “genuine problem” that department heads had no job security.

“It means you’re less capable of providing that kind of independent advice that is required in these dramatic circumstances, this being a very good example,” he said.

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“If you’re getting any political input in the process, you are compromised. High-paid public servants owe their jobs to political appointments. Their appointments can come and go … You can never divorce yourself from the influence.”

If there were concerns about the hiring process or political influence, Watson said it was the role of a public servant to report it.

There are codes of conduct for both public servants and ministers that apply in NSW, although much relies on individuals being proactive about their responsibilities.

The NSW Ombudsman is the main option for reporting wrongdoing and maladministration in government agencies, but a review described existing laws as “overly technical and complex” and full of “trip hazards” for public officials to navigate. New laws – due to come into effect in October next year – are intended to encourage public interest disclosures.

There is also the NSW Public Service Commission, but it does not have complaint-handling powers and Podger said it needs to be strengthened.

At the Commonwealth level, secretary appointments are made by the prime minister, but only after a report by the prime minister and cabinet secretary and the public service commissioner. The commissioner is also responsible for certifying senior executive appointments are made strictly according to merit, and these appointments are usually ongoing, not term contracts. The NSW equivalent does not have these statutory responsibilities.

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Chair of the Center for Public Integrity and former NSW judge, Anthony Whealy, QC, said further reforms should be considered to mitigate future controversies.

“What emerges from this case is the real political danger with the perception that integrity issues have not been followed where a minister is appointed so soon after his retirement,” he said.

“We ought to have a prohibition on a former minister being appointed for at least 12 months after resignation, to avoid that inevitable perception that someone’s getting a job for the boys.”

He also vouched for ministerial appointments made at the recommendation of a “truly independent panel”. “If they don’t agree, there need to be transparent reasons,” he said.

Whealy said intersections between government departments and ministers were inevitable and would always be fraught, but the Barilaro saga had exposed faults on both sides.

“It’s not truly an independent process, and neither is it ministerial – it’s a hybrid of the two. Unfortunately here, you can’t work out which one’s which.”

Lewis said it was necessary “to look quite broadly at what’s happening.”

“The forensic examination that is going on now – from the opposition’s point of view – is a gift,” she said.

“But it is certainly not peculiar to NSW or the Liberals. There are structural and cultural problems that need fixing in NSW and beyond.”

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Categories
US

Why Obama Was Allowed to Take White House Records but Not Trump

  • Donald Trump invoked Barack Obama while bashing the FBI raid on his Mar-a-Lago home on Monday.
  • Trump and Fox News delivered the whataboutism defense of Obama transferring records to Chicago after his term.
  • But Obama was able to do so because it was processed through the National Archives, which owns the records.

Former President Donald Trump is no longer satisfied with solely talking about Hillary Clinton’s emails when it comes to deflecting potential allegations he mishandled classified documents.

Now, the former president and his allies are clinging to completely unrelated claims about former President Barack Obama.

Earlier this week, the FBI executed an unprecedented search warrant on Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home in Palm Beach, Florida. It’s unclear what the FBI was looking for, but several reports linked the search warrant to the National Archives’ request early this year for the Justice Department to investigate whether Trump broke the law when he took classified government records with him to Mar-a-Lago .

In the days following the raid, Trump and his allies on Fox News delivered the whataboutism defense of Obama transferring records from the White House to Chicago for his presidential library.

“What happened to the 30 million pages of documents taken from the White House to Chicago by Barack Hussein Obama? He refused to give them back!” Trump wrote in a thursday post on Truth Social. “What is going on? This act was strongly at odds with NARA. Will they be breaking into Obama’s ‘mansion’ in Martha’s Vineyard?”

The former president and his son Donald Trump Jr. cited an opinion piece published by The New York Post in support of their baseless accusations.

But the facts don’t quite align with Trump’s statements

Tens of thousands of Obama’s documents were transported to Chicago. But these items were shipped to a federal government facility – exactly the thing that is supposed to happen with a president’s records. Federal law requires that presidents and their administrations keep a detailed collection of emails, documents, and even gifts from their time in office since all of those things are actually the property of the American people.

In Obama’s case, the National Archives took legal ownership of Obama’s documents and then began the long process of sorting through the material before the public could request it years later. Some of this material was then turned over to Obama’s presidential library, which, again, is the process that is supposed to happen.

Apart from the long processes, Obama’s presidential library will break from the precedent in that the Obama Foundation will pay for the unclassified records to be digitized in a bid to democratize access to the documents, in what is billed to be the “first digital archives for the first digital president,” according to The New York Times.

Trump and Trump Jr. also drew on a line from The New York Post column noting that, to date, the records transferred to Obama’s presidential library have yet to digitize the materials and make them available to the public — five years since the end of his term and when the record transfer began.

Though the delay has sparked some ire from historians and critics, the process of transferring the records themselves often take years, not to mention the task of digitizing roughly 30 million documents to be made available online.

Trump’s lawyer, on the other hand, said the feds took at least a dozen boxes containing sensitive — and some “top secret” — material from the former president’s Mar-a-Lago home, according to The Washington Post. The FBI’s search warrant was aimed at seeing if Trump had taken documents home with him that should have been turned over at the end of his term, per reports.

Though Trump world can draw similarities between Trump and Obama both taking records from the White House, the significant difference in how they took the documents explains why the former remains under scrutiny by the FBI and the latter is still in the process of setting up a library Unbothered by federal law enforcement.

Categories
Technology

Motorola launches a new 2022 Razr in China

Motorola is finally updating its Razr foldable — but only in China. The 2022 Razr offers a larger main screen, an extra camera, and Qualcomm’s latest and greatest chipset, the Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1. There’s also a new Flex View mode so you can open the screen halfway and use the phone hands-free. Kind of reminds us of another folding phone…

The 2022 Razr includes an upgraded main camera with 50 megapixels and optical stabilization plus a new 13-megapixel ultrawide. The main screen is a 6.7-inch OLED with a 144Hz refresh rate. It outdoes the Galaxy Z Flip 4 with a bigger 2.7-inch cover screen — while the Flip’s is a much smaller 1.9 inches, making it more of an at-a-glance display. With 2.7 inches, the Razr’s screen can offer a lot more, including a full notification interface.

The Razr offers a big cover screen that supports more interactive features than the Flip’s.
Image: Motorola

It’s a shame that the 2022 Razr isn’t getting a wider release because it looks like it improves on some of our issues with the 2020 Razr — including the price. The 2022 Razr starts at 5999 yuan, which is about $900 USD. That’s about $100 cheaper than the Z Flip 4 and much less expensive than the $1,399 2020 Razr. For now, foldables in the US remain a party of one.

Categories
Sports

Bill Russell’s No. 6 being retired in historic move for NBA

Bill Russell’s No. 6 jersey is being retired across the NBA, a first for the league.

The NBA and the National Basketball Players Association announced that the number worn by the 11-time champion, civil rights activist and person good enough to have been enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame as both a player and a coach was being permanently retired by all 30 teams.

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“Bill Russell’s unparalleled success on the court and pioneering civil rights activism deserve to be honored in a unique and historic way,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said. “Permanently retiring his No. 6 from him across every NBA team ensures that Bill’s transcendent career will always be recognised.”

Players who currently wear No. 6 — including the Los Angeles Lakers’ LeBron James — may continue doing so. But the number cannot be issued again, the league said.

All NBA players will wear a patch on the right shoulder of their jerseys this season, the league said, and every NBA court will display a clover-shaped logo with the No. 6 on the sideline near the scorer’s table.

The Boston Celtics have “separate and unique recognition for him on their uniforms” planned, the NBA said.

Russell died on July 31 at the age of 88. He was the most prolific winner in NBA history, an 11-time champion during a 13-year career — winning the last two of those titles as a player-coach — and the first Black coach in any of the major US pro sports to win a championship.

He marched with Martin Luther King Jr., stood with Muhammad Ali and received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama.

And having his number retired leaguewide puts him in a very exclusive club.

Major League Baseball permanently retired No. 42 — in honor of Jackie Robinson, who broke the big league’s color barrier — with the understanding that those who were wearing that number could continue to do so. Mariano Rivera of the New York Yankees was the last in the majors to wear No. 42, doing so through his final season in 2013.

The NHL, upon Wayne Gretzky’s retirement in 1999, said his No. 99 would be retired leaguewide in honor of that sport’s all-time scoring leader.

And now, Russell gets the same treatment. It also seems fitting that he and Robinson — both barrier-breakers — are linked again. Russell called Robinson a hero, once saying that “he showed me the way to be a man in professional sports.”

Robinson clearly held Russell in high esteem as well. Rachel Robinson, his widow, asked Russell to be a pallbearer at her husband’s funeral in 1972.

“This is a momentous honor reserved for one of the greatest champions to ever play the game,” NBPA Executive Director Tamika Tremaglio said. “Bill’s actions on and off the court throughout the course of his life helped to shape generations of players for the better and for that, we are forever grateful. We are proud to continue the celebration of his life and legacy of him alongside the league. ”

There have been more than 250 players in NBA history to wear a No. 6 jersey, including 24 who did so in at least one game last season — most notably, James, who has alternated between 6 and 23 throughout his NBA career.

Nobody has worn No. 6 for the Celtics since Russell’s final season, 1968-69.

Russell is one of 12 players currently enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame who wore No. 6 at least some point in their careers. The others: Julius Erving, Patrick Ewing, Ben Wallace, Don Barksdale, Chuck Cooper, Larry Costello, Tom Gola, Cliff Hagan, Alex Hannum, Buddy Jeanette and Neil Johnston.

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Australia

Education ministers face ‘massive’ teacher shortage in first meeting since federal election

Federal Education Minister Jason Clare says he and his state counterparts face “a massive challenge” to fix teacher shortages, as he meets with them for the first time today.

The first meeting of education ministers since Anthony Albanese’s election win will be attended not just by politicians but also teachers, principals and representatives from the unions and independent and Catholic school groups.

Mr Clare told ABC Radio National that classrooms were growing, but fewer teachers were available to run them.

“You have more and more kids going to school … at the same time we have seen a drop of 16 per cent of young students going into teacher training,” he said.

“There aren’t many more jobs more important than being a teacher and we just don’t have enough of them.”

The graduation rate for teachers is also far lower than for other university students, sitting at just 50 per cent compared to an average of 70 per cent for other degrees.

Mr Clare said the government had already committed to offering $40,000 bursaries to some students, but state and territory ministers will today also consider whether students and people seeking to retrain as teachers should be offered paid internships or other upfront incentives to study.

He said the government could also consider reintroducing shorter one-year education diplomas.

Labor campaign spokesman Jason Clare
Jason Clare says ministers will consider paid internships, shorter courses and pay incentives for teachers.(ABC)

The NSW government has already backed the Commonwealth government to consider university incentives to attract and improve retention of students studying education.

It is arguing against a national push on teacher pay, saying that it should be left to the states — and it’s considering an overhaul on pay agreements, proposing to offer $73,737 for new graduates and a salary up to $117,060 for teachers who gain accreditation as a highly accomplished or lead teacher.

NSW has also proposed employing dedicated workers to help ease administrative burdens for teachers, something Mr Clare supported.

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US

FBI search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago related to nuclear documents, sources say

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Classified documents relating to nuclear weapons were among the items FBI agents sought in a search of former president Donald Trump’s Florida residence on Monday, according to people familiar with the investigation.

Experts in classified information said the unusual search underscores deep concern among government officials about the types of information they thought could be located at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club and potentially in danger of falling into the wrong hands.

The people who described some of the material that agents were seeking spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation. They did not offer additional details about what type of information the agents were seeking, including whether it involved weapons belonging to the United States or some other nation. Nor did they say if such documents were recovered as part of the search. A Trump spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Justice Department and FBI declined to comment.

Attorney General Merrick Garland said he could not discuss the investigation on Thursday. But in an unusual public statement at the Justice Department, he announced he had personally authorized the decision to seek court permission for a search warrant.

Garland spoke moments after Justice Department lawyers filed a motion seeking to unseal the search warrant in the case, noting that Trump had publicly revealed the search shortly after it happened.

“The public’s clear and powerful interest in understanding what occurred under these circumstances weighs heavily in favor of unsealing,” the motion says. “That said, the former President should have an opportunity to respond to this Motion and lodge objections, including with regards to any ‘legitimate privacy interests’ or the potential for other ‘injury’ if these materials are made public.”

Analysis: Garland seeks to call Trump’s bluff

Material about nuclear weapons is especially sensitive and usually restricted to a small number of government officials, experts said. Publicizing details about US weapons could provide an intelligence road map to adversaries seeking to build ways of countering those systems. And other countries might view exposing their nuclear secrets as a threat, experts said.

One former Justice Department official, who in the past oversaw investigations of leaks of classified information, said the type of top-secret information described by the people familiar with the probe would probably cause authorities to try to move as quickly as possible to recover sensitive documents that could cause serious harm to US security.

“If that is true, it would suggest that material residing unlawfully at Mar-a-Lago may have been classified at the highest classification level,” said David Laufman, the former chief of the Justice Department’s counterintelligence section, which investigates leaks of classified information . “If the FBI and the Department of Justice believed there were top secret materials still at Mar-a-Lago, that would lend itself to greater ‘hair-on-fire’ motivation to recover that material as quickly as possible.”

The Monday search of Trump’s home by FBI agents has caused a political furor, with Trump and many of his Republican defenders accusing the FBI of acting out of politically motivated malice. Some have threatened the agency on social media.

As Garland spoke Thursday, police in Ohio were engaged in a standoff with an armed man who allegedly tried to storm the Cincinnati office of the FBI. The man was killed by police later that day; authorities said negotiations had failed.

Trump property search bring simmering threat of violence to the fore

State and federal officials declined to name the man or describe a potential motive. However, a law enforcement official identified him as Ricky Shiffer.

According to another law enforcement official, agents are investigating Shiffer’s possible ties to extremist groups, including the Proud Boys, whose leaders are accused of helping launch the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol. Both officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation.

A person using Shiffer’s name on TruthSocial, Trump’s social media site, posted a “call to arms” message shortly after Monday’s FBI search became public.

“People, this is it,” the message reads. “Leave work tomorrow as soon as the gun shop/Army-Navy store/pawn shop opens, get whatever you need to be ready for combat. We must not tolerate this one. They have been conditioning us to accept tyranny and think we can’t do anything for 2 years. This time we must respond with force.”

The Washington Post could not confirm whether the account actually belonged to Shiffer.

In his statement on Thursday, Garland defended FBI agents as “dedicated, patriotic public servants” and said he would not “stand by silently when their integrity is unfairly attacked … Every day they protect the American people from violent crime, terrorism and other threats to their safety while safeguarding our civil rights. They do so at great personal sacrifice and risk to themselves. I am honored to work alongside them.”

It was Garland’s first public appearance or comment since agents executed the warrant at Mar-a-Lago Club, taking about a dozen boxes of material after opening a safe and entering a padlocked storage area. The search was one of the most dramatic developments in a cascade of legal investigations of the former president, several of which appear to be growing in intensity.

The investigation into the improper handling of documents began months ago, when the National Archives and Records Administration sought the return of material taken to Mar-a-Lago from the White House. Fifteen boxes of documents and items, some of them marked classified, were returned early this year. The archives subsequently asked the Justice Department to investigate.

Former senior intelligence officials said in interviews that during the Trump administration, highly classified intelligence about sensitive topics, including about intelligence-gathering on Iran, was routinely mishandled. One former official said the most highly classified information often ended up in the hands of personnel who didn’t appear to have a need to possess it or weren’t authorized to read it.

Trump shares potentially revealing image of Iranian missile launch site on Twitter

That former official also said signals intelligence — intercepted electronic communications like emails and phone calls of foreign leaders — was among the type of information that often ended up with unauthorized personnel. Such intercepts are among the most closely guarded secrets because of what they can reveal about how the United States has penetrated foreign governments.

A person familiar with the inventory of 15 boxes taken from Mar-a-Lago in January indicated that signals intelligence material was included in them. The precise nature of the information was unclear.

The former officials and the other individual spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence matters.

This spring, Trump’s team received a grand jury subpoena in connection with the documents investigations, two people familiar with the investigation, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss details, confirmed to The Post on Thursday. Investigators visited Mar-a-Lago in the weeks following the issue of the subpoena, and Trump’s team handed over some materials. The subpoena was first reported by Just the News, a conservative media outlet run by John Solomon, one of Trump’s recently designated representatives to the National Archives.

People familiar with the probe have said it is focused on whether the former president or his aides withheld classified or other government material that should have been returned to government custody earlier. The people, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the investigation, said that as authorities engaged in months of discussions on the subject, some officials came to suspect the Trump team was not being truthful.

Pressure had been building for Garland to say something so that the public understands why the Justice Department — and a federal magistrate judge — believed the extraordinary step of executing a search warrant at the home of a former president was necessary. But Garland has stuck with his practice of not discussing ongoing investigations.

“Upholding the rule of law means applying the law evenly without fear or favor,” Garland said Thursday. “Under my watch, that is precisely what the Justice Department is doing.”

FBI search of Mar-a-Lago puts Garland in the midst of political firestorm

Trump and his allies have refused to publicly share a copy of the warrant, even as they and their supporters have denounced the search as unlawful and politically motivated but provided no evidence to back that up.

Lawyers for the former president can respond to the government’s filing with any objections to unsealing the warrant, leaving it to the judge overseeing the case to decide. He also could publicly release the warrant himself.

The judge ordered the Justice Department to confer with lawyers for Trump and alert the court by 3 pm Friday as to whether Trump objects to the unsealing.

After Garland’s appearance, Trump took to his own social media network to again decry the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago. But he made no indication of whether he would lodge an objection to the government’s filing.

If made public, the warrant would probably reveal a general description of what material agents were seeking at Mar-a-Lago and what crimes they could be connected to. A list of the inventory that agents took from the property would also be released. Details could be limited, however, particularly if the material collected includes classified documents.

How agents get warrants like the one at Mar-a-Lago, and what they mean

In addition to the anti-law enforcement threats and vitriol on social media sites and elsewhere this week, the furor over the search warrant has led to threats against the judge who approved the warrant request.

The Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association — the professional association representing 31,000 federal law enforcement officers and agents — said in a statement Wednesday evening that its agents had received “extreme threats of violence” this week.

“All law enforcement understand their work makes them a target for criminal actors,” wrote the group’s president, Larry Cosme. “However, the politically motivated threats of violence against the FBI this week are unprecedented in recent history and absolutely unacceptable.”

Republicans around Trump initially thought the raid could help him politically, but they are now bracing for revelations that could be damaging, a person familiar with the matter said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.

Jacqueline Alemany, Spencer S. Hsu, Meryl Kornfield and Rosalind S. Helderman contributed to this report.