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Sports

Paul Gallen press conference, two fights in one night, Justin Hodges, Ben Hannant, when is it, where is it, how to watch

Justin Hodges has lit a fuse ahead of his fight against Paul Gallen, declaring he’d knock the Blues legend out “easy” and provided a brutal reminder of who won more Origin series.

Gallen will fight Queensland legends Hodges and Ben Hannan on the same night in what promises to be an epic boxing extravanganza at the Nissan Arena in Brisbane on September 15.

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And just as there was bad blood as footy players in the feisty Origin clashes, it seems that no love has been lost since all three talked the talk at the press conference.

Gal made a wild bet that if Hodges put $10,000 on the line and knocked the Sharks great out, Hodges would receive $50,000.

“Put your money where your mouth is, put your balls on the line,” Gallen said.

“Have $10,000 on it. I’ll give you five-to-one.

“You’re not man enough… Shake my hand on $10,000. Shake my hand on the $10,000 bet.”

Hodges hit back with a cutting reply.

“I beat you in every series at Origin,” Hodges said.

Gal & Hodges trade insults over 50k bet | 01:28

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“I’ll knock you out easy.”

The Broncos legend was also blunt as to how the fight would end.

“I’m going to knock him out,” Hodges said.

“That’s what I’m training for.

“I’ve been working my guts off the last couple of fights preparing myself to what I need to go to.

“I know at some stage he likes to walk forward and that’s going to suit me to a tee, I’m going to catch him.

“I’ll see you in a couple of weeks.”

Ben Hannant was the first man to fan the flames when the former NRL star described Gal as someone who’s more “like a Queenslander” than the proud New South Welshman that he is.

“The most hated New South Welshman in history would have to be Paul Gallen,” Hannant said.

“The reason why is because what he brings. He’s actually like a Queenslander, to be honest.”

Gallen smoked: “Please don’t disrespect me like that. Come on.”

Hannant explained his claim further.

“He puts in effort, he keeps showing up, he never gives up,” Hannant said.

“Against everyone that he goes up against, he thinks he can beat.”

Justin Hodges and Ben Hannant will both fight Paul Gallen on the same night.  Picture: Scott's Shotz.
Justin Hodges and Ben Hannant will both fight Paul Gallen on the same night. Picture: Scott’s Shotz.Source: Supplied

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Categories
Australia

Peter Dansie allowed to appeal against his conviction for murdering his wife who drowned in an Adelaide pond

Australia’s highest court has allowed a man found guilty of murdering his wife by pushing her wheelchair into a pond to appeal against his conviction.

Peter Rex Dansie, 73, was sentenced to life in prison for killing his wife, Helen Dansie, in Adelaide’s southern parklands.

Mrs Dansie drowned in a pond in Veale Gardens in April 2017.

Dansie lost a bid to appeal his conviction in South Australia’s Court of Criminal Appeal two years ago.

Today, two High Court judges dismissed Dansie’s application to appeal, but Justice Kevin Nicholson said he would have quashed the conviction as the evidence did not rule out the possibility that Mrs Dansie might have accidentally drowned.

“It would be dangerous in all the circumstances to allow the verdict of guilty of murder to stand,” Justice Nicholson said.

The High Court then granted Dansie’s application for special leave to appeal the majority decision of South Australia’s appeal court.

Helen Dansie smiling.
Helen Dansie drowned in a pond at Veale Gardens in Adelaide in 2017.(Supplied: SA Police)

The High Court unanimously found South Australia’s Court of Criminal Appeal misapplied the law and has allowed Dansie to appeal against his conviction.

The matter will be remitted to the South Australian Supreme Court for rehearing.

In allowing the appeal, the High Court said the Supreme Court needed “more than mere satisfaction” to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.

“The appellant argues that the majority (of the Court of Criminal Appeal) misinterpreted and misapplied the approach required to be taken,” the judgment said.

“The appellant’s argument is well founded.

“The appeal must be allowed.

“What each member of the Court of Criminal Appeal needed to do in order to apply the test … was to ask whether he was independently satisfied as a result of his own assessment of the whole of the evidence added at the trial that the only rational inference available on that evidence was that the appellant deliberately pushed the wheelchair into the pond with intent to drown his wife.”

Divers in Veale Park pond
Police divers searching evidence in the pond at Veale Gardens in 2017.(Supplied: ABC News)

Mrs Dansie’s son Grant said he was “massively disappointed” the appeal had been granted.

“It’s like a never-ending story,” he said.

Dansie previously lost appeal

When Dansie was sentenced to a non-parole period of 25 years two years ago, Justice David Lovell said Mrs Dansie’s murder was the “ultimate act of domestic violence” and described it as an “evil and despicable act”.

“This was a chilling, planned murder of a person whose only mistake was to trust you,” he said.

During the trial, prosecutors alleged Dansie murdered his wife because he regarded her as a cost burden.

Mrs Dansie, a former microbiologist, suffered a stroke in the 1990s that left her with long-term disabilities.

The court at the time heard she was on an indexed pension for life, a large portion of which Mr Dansie was entitled to as her full-time carer.

Justice Lovell established a “dual motive” for the murder—a deterioration in Dansie’s feelings for his wife and an interest in pursuing a sexual relationship with another woman overseas.

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US

Garland Becomes Trump’s Target After FBI’s Mar-a-Lago Search

The FBI had scarcely decamped from Mar-a-Lago when former President Donald J. Trump’s allies, led by Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, began a bombardment of vitriol and threats against the man they see as a foe and foil: Attorney General Merrick B Garland.

Mr. Garland, a bookish former judge who during his unsuccessful Supreme Court nomination in 2016 told senators that he did not have “a political bone” in his body, responded, as he so often does, by not responding.

The Justice Department would not acknowledge the execution of a search warrant at Mr. Trump’s home on Monday, nor would Mr. Garland’s aides confirm his involvement in the decision or even whether he knew about the search before it was conducted. They declined to comment on every fact brought to their attention. Mr. Garland’s schedule this week is devoid of any public events where he could be questioned by reporters.

Like a captain trying to keep from drifting out of the eye and into the hurricane, Mr. Garland is hoping to navigate the sprawling and multifaceted investigation into the actions of Mr. Trump and his supporters after the 2020 election without compromising the integrity of the prosecution or wrecking his legacy.

Toward that end, the attorney general is operating with a maximum of stealth and a minimum of public comment, a course similar to the one chartered by Robert S. Mueller III, the former special counsel, during his two-year investigation of Mr. Trump’s connections to Russia.

That tight-lipped approach may avoid the pitfalls of the comparatively more public-facing investigations into Mr. Trump and Hillary Clinton during the 2016 election by James B. Comey, the FBI director at the time. But it comes with its own peril — ceding control of the public narrative to Mr. Trump and his allies of him, who are not constrained by law, or even fact, in fighting back.

“Garland has said that he wants his investigation to be apolitical, but nothing he does will stop Trump from distorting the perception of the investigation, given the asymmetrical rules,” said Andrew Weissmann, who was one of Mr. Mueller’s top aides in the special counsel’s office.

“Under Justice Department policy, we were not allowed to take on those criticisms,” Mr. Weissmann added. “Playing by the Justice Department rules sadly but necessarily leaves the playing field open to this abuse.”

Mr. Mueller’s refusal to engage with his critics, or even to defend himself against obvious smears and lies, allowed Mr. Trump to fill the political void with reckless accusations of a witch hunt while the special counsel confined his public statements to dense legal jargon. Mr. Trump’s broadsides helped define the Russia investigation as a partisan attack, despite the fact that Mr. Mueller was a Republican.

Some of the most senior Justice Department officials making the decisions now have deep connections to Mr. Mueller and view Mr. Comey’s willingness to openly discuss his 2016 investigations related to Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Trump as a gross violation of the Justice Manual, the department’s procedural guidebook.

The Mar-a-Lago search warrant was requested by the Justice Department’s national security division, whose head, Matthew G. Olsen, served under Mr. Mueller when he was the FBI director. In 2019, Mr. Olsen expressed astonishment that the publicity-shy Mr. Mueller was even willing to appear at a news conference announcing his decision to lay out Mr. Trump’s conduct but not recommend that he be prosecuted or held accountable for interfering in the Russia investigation.

But people close to Mr. Garland say that while his team respects Mr. Mueller, they have learned from his mistakes. Mr. Garland, despite his silence from him this week, has made a point of talking publicly about the investigation into the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol on many occasions — even if it has only been to explain why he cannot talk publicly about the investigation.

“I understand that this may not be the answer some are looking for,” he said during a speech marking the first anniversary of the Capitol attack. “But we will and we must speak through our work. Anything else jeopardizes the viability of our investigations and the civil liberties of our citizens.”



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At the time, that comment was intended to assuage Democrats who wanted him to more aggressively pursue Mr. Trump. Now it is Republican leaders, including Mr. McCarthy, Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and former Vice President Mike Pence, who are clamoring for a public explanation of his actions.

Mr. Garland enjoys a significant advantage over Mr. Mueller as he heads into battle. The House committee investigating the assault on the Capitol intends to continue its inquiry into the fall, and its members plan to make the issue of Mr. Trump’s actions a central political theme through the midterm elections and into 2024, providing Mr. Garland with the kind of covering fire Mr. Mueller never had.

Still, some of the attorney general’s supporters think he should be doing more to defend himself.

Even though the Justice Department does not generally talk about cases, guidelines preventing prosecutors from publicly discussing criminal investigations include exceptions to the mum-is-the-word norm. Federal prosecutors sometimes explain why they choose not to bring charges in high-profile matters if it is deemed to be in the public interest.

“In this era, does the public interest require more?” said Tali Farhadian Weinstein, a former federal prosecutor, who believes the department can better educate the public on how the rule of law works — without running afoul of laws governing grand jury material and ethical considerations.

“When you have Trump calling this a raid, why not explain how a search warrant works?” she asked. “Could that kind of information come out of the mouth of a public official, rather than a legal analyst on television?”

But Justice Department officials are painfully aware of the risks they are facing in such a politically sensitive inquiry, and many are bracing for the investigations Republicans have explicitly threatened to conduct if they take back the House in November’s elections.

As a result, Mr. Garland’s aides have been wary about disclosing even basic information, including the attorney general’s role in major decisions or the deployment of key personnel like Thomas P. Windom, who was tapped last fall to lead the investigation out of the US attorney’s office in Washington.

The FBI search at Mar-a-Lago appears to have been focused on Mr. Trump’s handling of materials that he took from the White House residence at the end of his presidency, including many pages of classified documents.

For now, there is no indication that the search, which was approved by a federal judge, is related to the department’s widening investigation into the plan to create slates of voters that falsely said Mr. Trump had won in key swing states in 2020.

However, the information gathered by investigators at Mar-a-Lago could be used in other cases if it proves relevant, according to Norman L. Eisen, who served as special counsel to the House Judiciary Committee during Mr. Trump’s first impeachment.

Nonetheless, by late Monday, the former president and his supporters tried to seize the offensive by filling the rhetorical void left by federal investigators, accusing Mr. Garland of perverting justice for political motives.

In the past, Democrats have been relentless in arguing that Mr. Trump’s behavior as president evoked the actions of dictators in other countries. In a statement on Monday night about the Mar-a-Lago search, Mr. Trump repurposed that line of criticism.

“It is prosecutorial misconduct, the weaponization of the Justice System, and an attack by Radical Left Democrats who desperately don’t want me to run for President in 2024,” he said in the statement, adding, “Such an assault could only take place in broken, Third-World Countries.”

As often happens, that argument quickly became a template for his supporters, especially those running for office this year. “The weaponization of Biden’s DOJ against political enemies is unprecedented,” Attorney General Eric Schmitt of Missouri, the Republican nominee for Senate in that state, wrote on Twitter. “This is Banana Republic stuff,” he added.

But no one went quite so far as Mr. McCarthy, the House Republican leader, who has sought to rehabilitate his relationship with the former president after sharply criticizing Mr. Trump’s actions on Jan. 6.

“I’ve seen enough,” Mr McCarthy said. “The Department of Justice has reached an intolerable state of weaponized politicization. When Republicans take back the House, we will conduct immediate oversight of this department, follow the facts, and leave no stone unturned.”

A Justice Department spokeswoman had no comment.

Categories
Business

China’s trust audit shows how worried it is

The review of the trusts and their exposure to property developers, however, suggests that they aren’t entirely confident that the crackdown has reduced the risks the shadow banks pose to financial stability to non-threatening proportions.

They shouldn’t be complacent. The scale of the issues within China’s property sector, the size of the sector within China’s economy and the degree of leverage associated with property in China does make property and property finance a threat to stability.

While the size of the threat posed by shadow banking might have been reduced since 2017, the implosion within the property development sector, the scale of the industry – property accounts for about a third of China’s GDP – shadow banking exposures to property, and the extent of leverage in the property and non-banking sectors, mean it remains very material.

China Evergrande is at the center of the country's property crisis, with its more than $US300 billion of liabilities providing context for the scale of the problem.

China Evergrande is at the center of the country’s property crisis, with its more than $US300 billion of liabilities providing context for the scale of the problem.Credit:Bloomberg

Property developers have defaulted on more than $US20 billion of largely offshore bonds this year and the sector shows no signs of stabilizing. Indeed, the distress has spread to some of the smaller regional banks, causing them to freeze depositors’ funds and sparking protests.

The pre-sales model used by the development sector has also ignited protests and refusals to service bank loans by mortgagors in more than 320 cities who are facing interest and principal payments on borrowings for uncompleted apartments.

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At the epicenter of those protests is the world’s most indebted developer, China Evergrande, with its more than $US300 billion ($431 billion) of liabilities providing some context for the scale of the property crisis.

The concern of the authorities is that, even though they have shrunk the shadow banking sector, it remains sizeable and opaque and its relationships with the rest of the financial system, and banks in particular, are often disguised by complex and less than transparent structures.

China’s big banks are well-capitalized and heavily regulated but, as a spate of scandals and outright fraud has shown, its small and medium-sized banks in the regions have sometimes taken on riskier exposures than would be considered prudent, using off-balance sheet structures to obscure what they have been doing.

In some respects, that’s a natural consequence of the tightening of bank capital and credit standards after the global financial crisis in 2008 even as the authorities were encouraging an apartment-building binge to stimulate economic activity and provide housing to accommodate the large-scale migration of rural Chinese to the major economic centres.

It pushed lending out of the mainstream banking sector and into the shadows and, despite the efforts to reign in and regulate non-bank activity in recent years, it appears the authorities are now concerned – in the midst of the property crisis – that they didn’t ‘t clamp down on non-bank activity hard enough.

The scale of the issues within China’s property sector, the size of the sector within China’s economy and the degree of leverage associated with property in China does make property and property finance a threat to stability.

The National Audit Office review of the trusts is looking, not just at the extent of the losses and prospective losses the trusts and their investors are facing but for the nature of those continuing linkages between the trusts and the wider financial system.

There are 68 trusts in China with about $4.3 trillion of assets – property loans, shares, bonds and commodities – under management, with property accounting for at least $500 billion of the total.
Their funding tends to be short term and therefore the potential for liquidity crunches and “runs” — a stampede by investors to get their money out in moments of crisis – and the kind of spreading contagion that the mortgagors’ and depositors’ protests have displayed. is latent.

China’s economic model, with its heavy emphasis on centrally driven growth targets, has been funded by increasing levels of debt at every level of the economy and has resulted in households that are leveraged and whose wealth is overexposed to a property market that is imploding.

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That risks, not just financial stresses within the economy, but the kind of social unrest that, in the lead up to the extension of his period as party leader to an unprecedented third term, Xi Jinping wouldn’t want to see develop.

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Categories
Technology

“The Impact Is Real” Campaign Launched By La Trobe Uni And CHEP

La Trobe University has revealed a new campaign and brand platform, “The Impact is Real”, demonstrating the impact that La Trobe students, academics and partners are having on people’s lives.

The new platform showcases the university’s strength in health, science and technology, and launches with a film featuring current LaTrobe University students, including The Australian Ballet’s principal artist, Benedicte Bemet (Bachelor of Psychological Science).

La Trobe University chief marketing officer, Natalie Ellisdon, said: “La Trobe is focused on delivering real impact in our communities today, not just tomorrow. We do this by our close collaborations with industry, conducting relevant research and focusing on building the skills of our students so that they have tangible experience that is directly and immediately applicable in the work that they do.

“Our focus and growth in the areas of health, science and technology and the growing needs of society in these areas means this impact will only continue to expand well into the future.”

La Trobe University director of brand & creative, Darcy Muller, added: “We wanted to position La Trobe as a University that has a clear focus and is differentiated from its peers. Most universities talk about intangible ideas of changing the world, but we want to show how La Trobe people actually affect lives right now.”

In addition to the film, the campaign is rolling out across TV, radio, OOH, cinema and digital channels.

CHEP general manager, Thomas Penn, commented: “We’re thrilled to be partnering with an ambitious brand that’s truly preparing Australians to make a positive impact in the new economy. La Trobe University’s impact on its students is apparent in all that they achieve, and we look forward to continuing to tell that story under this new brand platform.”

Credits:

Client: La Trobe
Chief Marketing Officer: Natalie Ellison
Director – Brand & Creative: Darcy Muller

Creative Agency: CHEP
Production Company: Collider
Director: Glenn Stewart
Executive Producer: Karen Bryson
Producer: Melissa Weinman
Director of Photography: Joey Knox
Grade: Matt Fez

Categories
Entertainment

Anne Heche was ‘coherent’ before her high-speed crash according to salon owner

A “coherent” Anne Heche didn’t appear to be inebriated as she posed for a smiling photo during a shopping trip just 21 minutes before the high-speed crash that left her in a coma, the owner of the store told The Post.

The actress posed with salon owner Richard Glass, 51, while buying a $125 red-haired wig and supplies from him during a visit to his salon in Los Angeles’ hotspot Venice.

The pic was timestamped 10:35am, Glass told The Post — meaning she left around 20 minutes before Heche’s car slammed into a house in nearby Mar Vista at 10:56am.

“I posted the image and not even an hour later it started blowing up,” Glass told The Post Tuesday of the photo he originally assumed would be nothing more than marking a “so random” visit from a Hollywood celeb.

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“I didn’t expect — or suspect — anything at all,” he said of the star, who police have confirmed is being investigated for possible hit and run and DUI for her wild, near-fatal high-speed drive after leaving his salon .

“She was polite, cordial and engaging — and she was consistent,” insisted Glass. “It was extremely pleasant — she was a delight,” he said.

Asked if he spotted any signs of her being drunk or on drugs, he firmly insisted: “Not at all.”

Glass — who has owned his studio, Glass Hair, for 21 years — said it was the first time Heche had ever visited.

“She came through the rear entrance of my studio while I was working on a client and said that she wanted a red wig,” he recalled.

The one she liked “hadn’t been cut or styled,” and he told her if she came back later he would have it washed and conditioned and fully prepared, he said.

“She said, ‘No worries, I’ll just take it now,’” he recalled, saying she bought special shampoo and conditioner for it, too, without saying why she wanted it.

“She asked, ‘Haven’t we worked together before?’ and she told me I was beautiful, ”he recalled warmly. “The whole encounter was less than 10 minutes.”

He was shocked when he later found out what happened to his celeb shopper, saying all he could think when he heard about her crash was “what in the world?”

Later, I noticed the red wig he sold in Heche’s car in a photo first posted by TMZ, which also said there appeared to be a bottle of booze.

While Glass insisted Heche seemed calm and coherent, the long-troubled actress was allegedly caught in a series of wild incidents in the moments after leaving Glass Hair and crashing into a house.

Police confirmed to The Post Monday that she is being investigated for hitting another car and then driving off. She was also filmed speeding away from someone telling her to get out of her car when she hit a garage door — as well as almost hitting a pedestrian.

Doorbell cameras then caught the sound of her roaring through quiet residential streets — before slamming into the house, sparking a blaze that took 59 firefighters more than an hour to tackle.

She’d only recently posted a since-deleted podcast, too, in which she admitted downing vodka and wine after being “rocked” by a “very bad day.” Her rep of her insisted to TMZ, however, that it had been recorded days before the crash.

As of Monday, Heche remained in a coma, her rep told Page Six.

“She has a significant pulmonary injury requiring mechanical ventilation and burns that require surgical intervention,” the rep said.

By Tuesday, an online fundraiser has also raised more than $100,000 for Lynne Mishele, the woman whose home was destroyed in the smash.

“Ms Mishele is devastated by what happened to her on Friday — not only because she and her pets almost lost their lives, but because all of her property, including items of profound sentimental value, were destroyed,” her lawyer, Shawn Holley, told The Post.

This article originally appeared in the New York Post and has been reproduced here with permission

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Categories
Sports

Truth about Ricciardo huge pay off for leaving McLaren

Daniel Ricciardo is perhaps the biggest disappointment of the Formula 1 season so far. While Lando Norris in the McLaren has already finished in the top ten, ten times this year and collected 76 championship points, the Australian has only scored four times with only 19 points. The British team has long been working on an alternative to Ricciardo and is signing top talent rookie driver Oscar Piastri. McLaren is said to have to dig deep with a huge pay off for Ricciardo.

The termination of the current contract with the honey badger could cost McLaren many millions, however. In Australian media, there is currently intense speculation about how the tricky situation surrounding the disappointing Ricciardo and his up-and-coming compatriot Piastri could be resolved with Ricciardo being said to have a unilateral clause in his current employment contract. According to this clause, only he alone can decide to continue driving or not for the McLaren racing team in 2023.

In order to buy this clause from the 33-year-old, McLaren must pay the eight-time Grand Prix winner the equivalent of more than 20 million euros. At least that is what the Australian website speedcafe.com reported. Also, racingnews365 wrote an article on the subject.

McLaren is currently said to be preparing for this so-called severance payment in order to buy the long-serving Formula 1 driver out of his current employment contract but could this really be the case?

At the GP in Monaco Zak Brown revealed, “I don’t want to get into the contract [details] but there But there are mechanisms in which we are committed to each other and then there are mechanisms in which we are not.”

This implies a break clause at the end of Daniel’s 2 year contract this winter. Ricciardo will have an option to break but Brown implies McLaren does too.

The break clause from McLaren’s perspective would almost certainly be based on a performance metric. Ricciardo may have been set an absolute target number of points by race 14, or it could be he is expected to score no less than a certain percentage of the points his team mate has achieved.

Daniel Ricciardo has been driving for McLaren since 2021, but is falling well short of expectations this year. In racing comparisons with teammate Lando Norris this season, it’s 4-9 from the perspective of the much more experienced man from Perth. The qualifying Ricciardo loses out even more, only besting Norris twice to his loss of eleven occasions.

In a swap with compatriot Oscar Piastri (currently a reserve and test driver), Ricciardo is most likely to be drawn back to Alpine (formerly Renault) next year. This website wrote an article on the news some weeks ago ahead of the mainstream media.

MORE F1: How Aston Martin “mugged” alpine over Alonso signing

Categories
Australia

Victorian Opposition Leader Matthew Guy’s media manager quits days after new chief of staff announced

Victorian Opposition Leader Matthew Guy has suffered another staffing setback less than four months out from the state election, with the resignation of his director of communications.

The Liberal Party said Lee Anderson resigned as media manager due to “personal reasons”.

Mr Anderson’s resignation on Wednesday has come just two days after the appointment of Mr Guy’s new chief of staff, Nick McGowan.

Some Liberal MPs raised concerns about the appointment of Mr McGowan, who has also been preselected as a Liberal Party candidate for the upper house.

This means he will have to stand down from the chief of staff position during the election period due to Victorian Electoral Commission rules.

Mr Anderson’s exit means Mr Guy will have lost two of his most senior staff members just months out from the November election.

Mr Anderson will be replaced by Alex Woff, a current member of the Liberal party’s communications team.

Anja Wolff will take on the role as deputy director of communications.

Last week, Mitch Catlin quit his role as the Opposition Leader’s chief of staff, after reportedly asking a Liberal Party donor to make payments totaling more than $100,000 to his private marketing business.

More to eat.

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Categories
US

Politicians embrace Christian nationalism. What is that ideology?

Politicians embrace Christian nationalism. What is that ideology?

Politicians are increasingly promoting Christian nationalism, the idea that America was founded as a Christian nation, by Christians, and that all its laws and institutions are based on Christianity

  • Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has cited the ideology several times in recent weeks.
  • It comes as conservatives are more often calling for less separation between church and state.
  • The Establishment Clause of the First Amendment is most frequently cited on the need for that separation.

On numbers recent occasionsRep. Marjorie Taylor Greene described herself as a “Christian nationalist,” calling the political ideology and cultural framework “actually a good thing” and claiming it’s an “identity that (Republicans) need to embrace.”

“I am being attacked by the godless left because I said I’m a proud Christian Nationalist,” Greene, R-Ga., wrote on Twitter on July 25. “The left has shown us exactly who they are. They hate America, they hate God, and they hate us.”

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Categories
Business

Australian mum goes viral on TikTok for 60kg weight loss

An Aussie mum who lost 60kg in a bid to save her life now looks unrecognizable.

After suffering postnatal depression following the birth of her son, Brisbane mum Brooke Hoggan struggled with her weight.

She would turn to food for comfort, while she stopped being as active as she once was – causing her to gain weight rapidly.

After hitting her heaviest weight of 120kg, the eyelash technician decided to see her doctor for help to slim down – but soon discovered that the weight was not her only issue.

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“After having my son, I struggled with postnatal depression which caused major weight gain,” Brooke, 29, said.

“I was eating takeaway all the time, and wasn’t very active. I tried lots of different methods to lose weight, but nothing worked.

“I decided to go see a doctor to get help losing weight, but that’s when I found out about more serious issues.

“I had a fatty liver due to my weight. My levels were quadruple what they were meant to be.

“It was a life or death situation. My doctor told me that I’d have to either lose weight straight away, or I would need to go in for a liver transplant.

“It was terrifying.”

Brooke said her GP gave her a grim diagnosis – either she lost weight, or she could die.

Her only option was to either get a gastric sleeve to help jump start her weight loss, or to undergo a risky liver transplant, which could take time she did not have.

Faced with this unimaginable choice, Brooke decided to undergo gastric sleeve surgery in March 2021.

The surgery involves the removal of 80 per cent of the stomach organ and is performed under a general anesthetic using advanced laparoscopic keyhole surgery.

While this helped her initially lose 20kg, after three months Brooke noticed it “stopped working”, and no matter what she did, the weight wouldn’t budge.

Going back to her doctor, she was told this was “very unusual”.

“I couldn’t understand what was happening. Everything had been going well and they bam – no more weight loss” she said.

“I’d seen people who could lose way more than me after having this done, so I couldn’t understand it.”

It turned out she had an underactive thyroid, and the gastric sleeve could only do so much before it stopped working.

Determined not to let herself gain the weight back she had already lost, she sought help from a personal trainer, and followed a strict high-protein meal plan, along with regular PT sessions that included a mix of strength and cardio exercise.

“After the tests revealed I had thyroid issues, I knew it was up to me to put in the extra work to get the weight off.

“I’d already lost 20kg, so I had that motivation. I found an amazing personal trainer who set up an eating and exercise plan.

“In the past year, I have managed to drop another 40kg through a strict diet and exercise program.

“I could never have done it without this change.”

Now, after losing a total of 60kg, Brooke said she feels like she has her “life back”.

When she shared her journey on TikTok, the mum-of-two went viral – racking up nearly two million views on her video.

“My liver is totally back to normal, and I owe it all to weight loss” she said.

“I could have lost my life. I might not have been there for my kids, and that terrifies me.

“Everything I do is for them. I feel like a different person now, and a better mum.

“I’m so much happier, more confident, and I have the drive to go out there and do things.

“At my biggest, I only wore black clothes. Now I’m wearing all types of bright colors.

“I’ve got my life back and kicked old Brooke to the kerb for good.”

Read related topics:Brisbane

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