Categories
Australia

COVID in WA: Hospitals wind back COVID-19 screening to free up staff as State passes peak

West Australian hospitals will scale back their COVID-19 screening protocols in a bid to free up staff and allow more visitors.

Public hospitals will shift from “red alert” to a new blue alert level from August 15, bringing an end to several months of heightened precautions.

Patients presenting at emergency departments will only be required to undergo rapid antigen tests upon arrival if they are symptomatic.

The testing requirement will also be removed for asymptomatic visitors unless they are visiting a high-risk area or vulnerable patients.

Visitors must still show proof of vaccination but staff will conduct spot checks rather than mass inspections.

The medical system is on its knees at the moment … our system does not have enough beds to allow this to go up much more,

Healthcare workers who had been required to wear N95-style masks across all clinical areas will now only need to do so when caring for vulnerable patients or working in high-risk areas. Surgical masks must be worn elsewhere.

The changes come as hospitals continue to struggle with getting patients through emergency departments and into beds.

Ambulances spent a record 6982 hours ramped outside hospitals in July.

Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson says the changes will help ensure effective patient flow and free up frontline health staff.

“This is a measured approach to scaling back the COVID response in hospitals, which has been endorsed by the chief health officer, and expert infection control teams from the WA health system,” Ms Sanderson said on Tuesday.

“In a time when WA has passed its most recent peak of COVID-19, it makes sense to take practical, reasonable measures to free up some burdens, and support healthcare workers and families supporting their loved ones in hospital.”

WA Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson (file image)
Camera IconAmber-Jade Sanderson says the COVID screening changes will free up frontline health staff. Credit: AAP

A limit of two visitors per patient will remain but may be extended by staff under certain circumstances.

Visiting hours will be extended at every hospital and essential visitors will be allowed to visit outside the standard hours.

WA Health on Tuesday reported 2,965 new COVID-19 cases. There were 358 people in hospital including 11 in intensive care.

Australian Medical Association WA president Mark Duncan-Smith last month warned changing the screening protocols would make it easier for the virus to spread in hospitals.

“The medical system is on its knees at the moment … our system does not have enough beds to allow this to go up much more,” he said.

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Categories
US

York, Pa., police investigating two suspicious deaths

JERRY IT WILL TAKE AN AUTOPSY TO KNOW FOR SURE, BUT POLICE ARE LOOKING AT THE POSSIBILITY THAT THIS MAY BE DRUG RELATED. FIVE PEOPLE FOUND INSIDE A HOME IN THE 600 BLOCK OF WEST LOCUST STREET SUNDAY EVENING. A 48 YEAR OLD MAN WAS DEAD OF 38, RATHER, 37 YEAR OLD WOMAN WOULD DIE AT THE HOSPITAL. THREE OTHERS NEEDED TO BE HOSPITALIZED. ACROSS THE WESTERN NEIGHBORHOOD, PEOPLE WERE SHOCKED BUT DECLINED TO TALK ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED. EVEN IF IT’S DRUG RELATED, WE STILL LOOK AT THOSE AS A CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION AND WE LOOK INTO WHO SUPPLIED THE DRUGS. WHAT HAVE YOU. NOW POLICE KNOW WHO THE VICTIMS ARE, BUT THE NAMES HAVE NOT BEEN RELEASED. AN AUTOPSY IS SET FOR TOMORROW

York police investigating two suspicious deaths

Police in York are investigating two suspicious deaths. Police said they were called to a home on the 600 block of West Locust Street on Sunday around 7 pm for a report of several people who were unconscious. Officers said they found five people in need of medical attention. One person was pronounced dead in the home. A second person died at the hospital. The victims were identified only as a 48-year-old man and a 37-year-old woman. The deaths could be drug-related, but that has yet to be confirmed. The deaths are under investigation.”Even if it’s drug-related, we still look at those as a criminal investigation. We look into who supplied the drugs, what have you,” Det. Sgt. Kyle Hower said.The other three people were treated at York Hospital.TipsIf you have any information that could help investigators, you can contact them in any of the following ways:Submit an online tip here.Call the York City Police Tip Line at 717-849-2204. Call the York City Police Department at 717-846-1234 or 717-849-2219. Email Det. Baez: [email protected].

Police in York are investigating two suspicious deaths.

Police said they were called to a home on the 600 block of West Locust Street on Sunday around 7 pm for a report of several people who were unaware.

Officers said they found five people in need of medical attention.

One person was pronounced dead in the home. A second person died at the hospital.

The victims were identified only as a 48-year-old man and a 37-year-old woman.

The deaths could be drug-related, but that has yet to be confirmed. The deaths are under investigation.

“Even if it’s drug-related, we still look at those as a criminal investigation. We look into who supplied the drugs, what have you,” Det. Sgt. Kyle Hower said.

The other three people were treated at York Hospital.

Tips

If you have any information that could help investigators, you can contact them in any of the following ways:

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Categories
Business

ABS: Monthly household spending indicator reveals 10 per cent more spending

Household spending in June was up more than 10 per cent compared with the same time last year, as Australia struggles through skyrocketing cost of living.

The latest monthly spending figures, released on Tuesday by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, show household spending increased 10.2 per cent through the year, with a 15.9 per cent increase on services and a 5.0 per cent increase on goods.

Both discretionary and non-discretionary spending increased – not surprising given the rate of inflation is 6.1 per cent.

Discretionary spending rose by 10.8 per cent, driven by spending in recreation and cultural activities, while non-discretionary spending on essentials rose 9.8 per cent, due to the rising cost of transport.

The most significant area of ​​spending was on transport, up 22.7 per cent, driven by higher oil prices due to the ongoing war in Ukraine and the demand for air travel.

Spending at hospitality businesses like hotels, cafes and restaurants was up 17.1 per cent in what is viewed as a positive return to pre-pandemic levels.

There was also strong growth in spending on clothing and footwear – up 16.3 per cent; as well as a 15.5 per cent increase in recreation and culture.

Jacqui Vitas, from the Australia Bureau of Statistics, said June marked the 16th consecutive month of through-the-year increases in total household spending.

“This was off the back of consistent decreases in total household spending from March 2020 to February 2021, as responses to Covid-19 were experienced across the country,” she said.

“Spending categories most impacted from Covid-19 responses – transport, hotels, cafes and restaurants, and clothing and footwear – have now returned to pre-pandemic levels.”

Queensland and Victoria recorded the highest state-based increases in spending through the year, spending 12.4 per cent and 11.8 per cent respectively more.

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Categories
Technology

Google trade-in values ​​for old Pixels skyrocket w/ Pixel 6a

The US Google Store is running a rather notable trade-in promotion for the Pixel 6a that significantly increases the trade-in value of older Pixel, as well as iPhone and Samsung, devices.

Update 8/8: Google has brought back the significant boost to trade-in values ​​for the Pixel 6a until Saturday, September 24. The difference is that there’s no free Pixel Buds A-Series offer, and it comes just after the $50 Google Store credit ended.

This applies to all 6a models sold on store.google.comincluding Unlocked, Google Fi, Verizon, and AT&T.

Like before, the chart below assumes that your Pixel turns on, is free of cracks, and has a working screen. To see how much Google increased the trade-in values ​​for what’s basically a $149 Pixel 6a, we show the credit you’ll get when buying the Pixel 6.

Trade-in Storage Pixel 6a Pixel 6
Pixel 3 64GB $85 $32
128GB $100 $47
Pixel 3XL 64GB $100 $64
128GB $110 $74
Pixel 3a 64GB $300 $47
Pixel 3a XL 64GB $300 $68
Pixel 4 64GB $290 $111
128GB $300 $121
Pixel 4XL 64GB $290 $142
128GB $300 $152
Pixel 4a 128GB $300 $84
Pixel 4a 5G 128GB $300 $84
Pixel 5 128GB $300 $347
Pixel 5a 128GB $300 $200

Update 7/26: As a reminder, the boosted trade-in expires on Wednesday (July 27, 2022 at 11:59 pm PT) before the Pixel 6a hits retail. You also have until then to get Pixel Buds A-Series for free with your 6th pre-order. Depending on your location, Friday delivery (in the US) is still possible if you order today.


Genuine 7/21: When buying the Pixel 6a through the US google storetrade-in values ​​have significantly increased to a maximum of $300 if your Google device is in the best condition possible.

The Pixel 3a and 3a XL are the oldest phones eligible for the $300 trade-in credit. Others include the Pixel 4, 4 XL, 4a, 4a 5G, 5, and even last year’s 5a. (For comparison, the Pixel 3 XL tops out at $110.)

This boosted trade-in ends on Wednesday, July 27 at 11:59 pm PT, or just before the Pixel 6a hits retail. Remember that you’ll also get Pixel Buds A-Series with your pre-order, which is another $99 value. Check out the terms and conditions:

Trade-in values ​​vary based on condition, year, and configuration of your eligible device, and are subject to change upon inspection. Credit card refund available only on a card used to purchase the Pixel phone. Phone trade-in credit will be issued as a refund back on the credit card used for the phone purchase at Google Store or in the form of Store Credit if the purchased phone has already been returned. Refund is based on (and paid after) phone received matching the description provided at time of estimate and will be issued to form of payment used for order. Phones sent for trade-in must be received within 30 days of initiation of trade-in process, provided the purchased device has not been returned during that time.

As we noted in our review this morning, the Pixel 6a is a great upgrade for current Pixel 3a and 3a XL owners that are no longer receiving updates.

In terms of size, the Pixel 6a is roughly the same size as the standard Pixel 3a, just with smaller bezels. It also comes with the addition of an ultrawide camera, a much better display, and, most crucially, the major chip upgrade that is Google Tensor. Compared to the Snapdragon 670 found in that 2019 phone, Tensor is a massive upgrade.

You also get 50% more RAM, double the storage at 128GB, 5G, hole-punch screen, larger battery (4,410 vs 3,000 mAh), and IP67 water resistance.

Be sure to tell us in the comments below if you’re taking advantage of this Pixel 6a trade-in.

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Categories
Sports

Golf 2022: Nick Faldo breaks down in live TV commentary farewell, CBS, PGA Tour Wyndham Championship scores, result

Golf legend Nick Faldo was reduced to tears and barely able to speak as he signed off on his 16-year career commentary in an emotional live TV segment.

The six-time major winner is leaving CBS and the Golf Channel and plans to focus on running his Montana farm and other business.

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Faldo, 65, was a blubbering mess as he attempted to give his final address sitting alongside fellow CBS analysts Jim Nantz, Ian Baker-Finch and Frank Nobilo after the Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club

“I blew it,” he said, struggling to compose himself. “I was already…”

Faldo wept before finally stringing an emotional sentence together: “So I was on a boat in Ireland… They gave me a call and said, ‘How would you like to sit next to Jim Nantz?’ I literally fell out of the boat. I really did. That was 2006, and here we are, 16 years later.

Australian Baker-Finch and New Zealander Nobilo paid tribute to Faldo before the Englishman uttered an emotional final line.

“I’m a single child and at 65 I found three brothers, thank you,” he said.

Meanwhile South Korean Kim Joo-hyung fired a stunning nine-under par 61 to win the Wyndham Championship, his first US PGA Tour title, and secure his spot in the season-ending playoffs.

Kim’s outstanding effort at Sedgefield Country Club, where the 20-year-old played the first nine holes of the final round in eight-under, capped a remarkable week that opened with his quadruple bogey eight at the first hole on Thursday.

“It’s definitely a week I’ll remember forever,” Kim said after his 20-under total of 260 gave him a five-stroke victory over fellow South Korean Im Sung-jae and American John Huh.

“I can’t believe it — I’m speechless right now,” Kim said, his emotions finally showing after a round in which he looked in supreme control.

“I’ve worked really hard to get to this point,” he said, his voice cracking. “Just walking off that 18th green, just thinking about the behind the scenes work.

“It was a hard day. I didn’t know golf was this stressful,” added the player who goes by the nickname Tom in a nod to his childhood love of Thomas the Tank Engine.

Cameron Percy was the best-placed Australian, finishing tied eighth, nine shots off the lead.

Originally published as Golf legend Nick Faldo reduced to blubbering mess in stirring live TV farewell

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Categories
Australia

Young adult researchers with Down syndrome hoping to change the narrative

A new study of young adults with Down syndrome has found they often have high aspirations, usually grounded with a sense of realism.

“One of the things I loved seeing was this zest [for] life, the joy and enthusiasm in so many things,” University of Queensland Associate Professor Rhonda Faragher said.

“And a really important finding is that they don’t like to be treated differently. They don’t want to be singled out. They don’t want to be, perhaps, patronized.

“We know a good quality of life is not only possible. It’s common.”

The study ‘Stepping out in the world: the new adulthood for Gen Zs with Down syndrome’ involved interviews with 27 people around Australia as part of a National Disability Research Partnership grant.

“When I was growing up, there weren’t people with Down syndrome around — they were usually taken at birth to live in institutions, often with a short life span,” Dr Faragher explained.

“And we became intrigued by the idea that these young people who had left school were leading very different lives to what people had in the past.”

‘I feel proud’

Six women and two men stand together in a group.
Members of the research team Mia Johnston, Dr Rhonda Faragher, Alana Pettigrew, Bobby Pate, Ruth Faragher, Dr Jan Lloyd, Rebecca Flanagan and Michael Cox.(Supplied: University of Queensland)

The project employed four people with Down syndrome as research assistants who helped with the interviews and took part in the focus groups.

“We don’t do work on people with Down syndrome, we do it with and by,” Dr Faragher said.

Two adults with Down syndrome served on the project’s steering committee, Bobby Pate and Dr Faragher’s daughter, Ruth.

“I got involved in the research with my mum, basically because I’ve got Down syndrome, so I am really good at things,” Ruth Faragher explained.

Research assistant Mia Johnston says she feels like she’s achieved something.

“My family is proud and I feel proud for myself,” she said.

Study participant Catherine Mullany from Brisbane said she told the researchers she has a good life.

“I am 23 years old. I have a job at coffee roasters — and get paid,” she said.

“My dream is to keep my job, get gold medals for swimming, things like that… I love my dreams.”

‘We are people just like everyone else’

A man speaks on stage as four women and one man stand behind him.
Michael Cox and members of the research team present the findings at the University of Queensland.(Supplied: University of Queensland)

The project was carried out by the University of Queensland’s Down Syndrome Research Program, which began in the late 1970s and is believed to be the world’s oldest and longest study of people with the genetic condition.

Dr Faragher first made contact with the program after Ruth was born in 1996.

“I knew a little about Down syndrome, but not much,” she said.

One of the directors of the center at the time was Dr Anne Jobling.

“When I first met Rhonda, she was an anxious mother, and we had much data we could share about developmental progress that was contrary to the literature at that time,” Dr Jobling said.

Dr Faragher was a mathematics teacher when Ruth was born, but she later became an academic and eventually director of the Down Syndrome Research Project.

“What a lovely turn of the circle,” she said.

“Going from when I was receiving the information as a new mother, that came out of the research studies, to now being able to contribute to that work.”

Dr Jobling says stepping out into the adult world is still an enormous challenge for people with Down syndrome, but she’s seen a remarkable change in her lifetime.

“It is absolutely amazing to me that we have been able to come so far,” Dr Jobling said.

Speaking at the release of the Gen Z report at UQ, research assistant Michael Cox said it was a wonderful opportunity to spread an important message.

“We may have disability. We may have Down syndrome but people do forget that we are people just like everyone else,” he said.

Watch this story on 7.30 on ABC TV and ABC iview.

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Categories
Business

CEO Ross McEwan says home loans repayments are on track despite rising interest rates

This appears to have spooked the market, with NAB shares falling 3 per cent on Tuesday morning; the stock is essentially flat year-to-date.

But the margin boost is coming, with Citi analyst Brendan Sproules tipping NAB’s NIM will lift from 1.62 per cent in May to 1.64 per cent by September, and then 1.76 per cent a year later.

But with the RBA only starting its tightening cycle in May, later than many of its global peers, investors will need to wait a little longer for this tailwind to really get going.

Of course, rising rates are a double-edged sword for banks, and NAB chief executive Ross McEwan has been vocal in urging borrowers worried about mortgage stress to come forward early and seek help, whether that’s an adjustment to their loan repayments, fixing or splitting their loan, tapping their redraw facility, or plain old hardship assistance.

But for now, NAB’s mortgage book looks to be in pretty good shape.

NAB’s total credit impairment charge for the quarter was just $11 million, less than a third of the charge it took in the March quarter.

Better still, loans 90 days or more past due and gross loans as a percentage of NAB’s lending book continue to decline. Just 0.7 per cent of NAB’s loans were in this “troubled” category at June 30, compared with 0.75 per cent at March 30, and 1.13 per cent at June 30, 2021.

Again, NAB’s June quarter numbers – and Commonwealth Bank’s full-year profits on Wednesday – come too early to reflect the full impact of the RBA’s rate rises, so there is no doubt that what mortgage stress we do see is still some months down the track .

But the fact the percentage of troubled loans in NAB’s book is still falling shows the banks – and households more broadly – ​​will start this tough period in a pretty good spot.

McEwan believes most of his customers can absorb higher rates, with about 70 per cent of home loan repayments ahead of schedule.

Of course, the glass-half-empty view is that there are 30 per cent of customers living mortgage payment to mortgage payment – ​​including a big chunk of borrowers set to shift from fixed rates to variable ones – in an environment where rates will end the year about 3 per cent higher than where they started it.

And, according to Barrenjoey analyst Jonathan Mott, it’s the 10 per cent of households – who account for something like $200 billion of home loans – that represent the real worry; the average customer might be fine, but it’s the tail that can hurt the banks.

But as McEwan points out, this slowdown won’t look like your parent’s three decades ago – historically low unemployment and historically high household savings should provide resilience this time around.

If consumer spending can moderate, as appears likely, and wage growth doesn’t get out of control, perhaps the soft landing that the RBA craves can be engineered.

Categories
Sports

Georgia Godwin rise highlights new way for gymnastics

“Recently I’ve tried to look after Georgia the person before Georgia the gymnast,” she said. “That’s been a huge step in my journey this year, really trying to find me as a person and not have my whole identity as a gymnast, which has been challenging because gymnastics is very tightly knit into my life.”

Such an attitude is nearly revolutionary in a sport where gymnasts have often suppressed their needs while striving for success, stressed by the idea that careers draw to a close with puberty.

All this stands in stark contrast to what the sport has been pummeled for after athlete Athe Netflix documentary that chronicled the rampant abuses within women’s elite gymnastics.

American superstar Simone Biles was among those calling for change.

American superstar Simone Biles was among those calling for change.Credit:Getty Images

athlete A sparked a global outpouring of gymnasts sharing their traumatic experiences, including in Australia, where more than two dozen former national team members took to social media to expose what many allege amounted to abusive treatment.

That sparked an official inquiry by the Australian Human Rights Commission, whose findings exposed the sport’s “win-at-all-costs” culture. Liddick, who is no longer a national coach, was sanctioned by the National Sports Tribunal earlier this year and acknowledged in a letter that she “engaged in unacceptable coaching behaviours, in particular the use of negative language which was belittling, offensive, and humiliating”.

The careers of Godwin and several of her teammates straddle the old way of training elite gymnasts and a more athlete-centric model where gymnasts and their personal coaches have more freedom to decide what’s best that is slowly coming into form in Australia.

The new methods — training hard but smart, taking time off to take care of injuries, and most of all speaking up when they have something to say — provide a blueprint for conduct that many athletes, including Olympic superstar Simone Biles, have now spent years advocating for.

When Godwin’s mental health needed tending to after a bout of post-Olympic blues threatened to halt her progress, she called a meeting of her team and told them point-blank how she had been feeling.

Godwin (left) embraces countrywoman and fellow Birmingham gold medalist Kate McDonald.

Godwin (left) embraces countrywoman and fellow Birmingham gold medalist Kate McDonald.Credit:AP

“And they were so helpful!” she marveled, adding that the Australian Institute of Sport’s mental health referral network found someone to help her. “For a long time we’ve internalized everything, and so it’s a bit of a challenge to try and change that, but I do want to see a big change in speaking up about your program and speaking up about how you’re feeling and things like that. I’m trying to show the young ones that it’s OK to be a little bit open and vulnerable. My main goal is to show them that you can enjoy the experience, plus you can do well.”

That has translated to small changes, like having the freedom to wander the Commonwealth athletes village — “to go outside, talk to people, enjoy being there,” Godwin said — and bigger ones, too. When Commonwealth Games beam gold medalist Kate McDonald was looking to change gyms late last year, she did a trial at the gym where she presently trains and was astounded when other athletes literally applauded her skill.

“And as soon as that happened I was like, wow, this is crazy, this environment is so different and I’m already in love with this place,” McDonald, 22, said. “That’s really given me such a good turn in my gymnastics, and I’m just so happy now.”

Godwin is yet to decide whether she will push on to the Paris Olympics in two years.

Godwin is yet to decide whether she will push on to the Paris Olympics in two years.Credit:Getty

Godwin did not begin the sport with big ambitions. She dabbled in tennis and athletics as a child, but she kept returning to gymnastics, attracted by the fun of flying through the air but also by the building-block nature of the sport. But by the time she reached her upper echelons, the Olympics were well in view.

She swallowed the disappointment of missing Glasgow and stuck it out when Australia failed to qualify a team for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. She made it to Tokyo on the strength of her individual performance at the 2019 World Championships, then waited through the pandemic to be able to travel and compete again. She finished 37th all-around in Tokyo.

After an Olympics and Commonwealth glory, what comes next? “There’s no specific competition I want to tick off, but it’s just the experience and the atmosphere that I really want to dive into,” Godwin said.

McDonald, for her part, feels she is just getting started. “I feel like I still have so much time and so much more to give in the sport,” she said. “You can be 25, 26. Georgia’s 24 and she’s still producing amazing results.”

Godwin has yet to decide whether she will go for the 2024 Olympics, or even to return to England for the World Championships in Liverpool in October. She and her teammate Emily Whitehead, also a Tokyo Olympian, have informed Gymnastics Australia that they will reassess their status once they return home.

“We’ve already told GA where we’re at physically and mentally, and they’re starting to listen, which is nice. They’ve really put a hold on it and we’ll let them know,” Godwin said.

At the moment, London and Paris beckon for a long-awaited holiday. The 2024 Olympic host city is of particular interest to Godwin, who enjoyed a small taste of it during a pre-Games training camp.

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“The vibe and the atmosphere in Paris was like one big party,” Godwin said.

“So I’m quite excited to go back post competing and actually get involved in the party.”

Blyth Lawrence is a freelance American journalist specializing in gymnastics and Olympic sports.

Categories
Australia

Diagnosed with PTSD and depression, ex-serviceman William considers himself one of the ‘lucky’ ones

A 2015 military deployment to Egypt changed former soldier William McCann’s life.

Frozen by the constant sound of alarms and gunfire while on deployment there, he feared he would die.

On his return to Australia, that fear and distress spilled out when he met his newborn son for the first time.

“I sort of regret it a little bit today that my first words to him, I don’t know why I said this was, ‘I didn’t think I would get to see you’,” he told the Royal Commission into Defense and Veterans’ Suicide.

“[They] were my first words to my son. It was probably an indicator then [of post-traumatic stress disorder] too, but I didn’t want to admit it to myself.”

Mr McCann said he became so overwhelmed by the noise of “rounds landing, rounds firing and alarms constantly resounding” in Egypt that it triggered his fight or flight response, resulting in him freezing and laying on the ground for an undetermined amount of time.

That incident, and a combination of shame and embarrassment around his reaction, led to a severe deterioration in his mental health.

“I started to realize I was really lacking a lot of confidence… I felt like I really didn’t belong,” he said.

“I felt like I was failing at every step along the way, and I got to feel that my motivation was gone; I just didn’t have that spark I had once before.”

He also started having daily thoughts about taking his own life.

Mr McCann was initially diagnosed with depression upon his return but was diagnosed with PTSD two years later in 2018.

He was eventually medically discharged in early 2019, exactly 13 years after he joined the Australian Defense Force.

Initially feeling like he had been “left in the lurch” by the Army when he was discharged shortly after receiving the diagnosis, Mr McCann quickly turned his focus to getting as much support as possible before he left.

“I didn’t want to be a financial burden on my family,” he said.

He completed multiple PTSD short courses and began the arduous process of finding a new psychologist — something he said was much more difficult outside of the ADF.

A screen inside the royal commission shows the Australian Government logo and signage.
The commission will finish its Hobart hearings on Wednesday.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

One of the ‘lucky’ ones

Mr McCann said he was inspired to give evidence at the royal commission to bring awareness to the struggles that people who experienced less support than he did had faced during and after their careers.

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Categories
US

Tucker Carlson ‘Shitting Himself’ Scared That His Alex Jones Texts May Leak

This reporting appears as one of several scoops featured in this week’s edition of trust, the newsletter pulling back the curtain on the media. Subscribe here and send your questions, tips, and complaints here.

Tucker Carlson is “shitting himself” over the possibility that texts between him and far-right conspiracy loon Alex Jones will leak, a source close to the Fox News star told Confider.

Carlson and the raving Infowars ranter trade text messages on a daily basis, according to two people familiar with their relationship. If made public, these sources said, the text messages would be “highly embarrassing” for Carlson.

Two years’ worth of text messages sent and received by Jones are now in the possession of the US House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection after the far-right conspiracy king’s lawyers accidentally sent a digital copy of all his texts to the lawyers representing the families affected by the Sandy Hook elementary school massacre, which Jones repeatedly dubbed a “hoax.” (Last week, a Texas jury ruled that Jones must pay a combined $49 million in compensatory and punitive damages to the parents of one of the schoolchildren killed in that 2012 mass shooting.)

Like what you’re reading? Subscribe to the Confider newsletter here and have The Daily Beast media team’s stellar reporting sent straight to your inbox every Monday night.

The lawyer representing the families, Mark Bankston, has publicly said the texts include “intimate messages” between Jones and self-described “dirty trickster” Roger Stone, who melted down on Telegram and called for Jones to sue his own attorney.

Carlson and Jones have maintained a friendly relationship for years. The Fox News primetime star has made multiple appearances on Infowars, gushed over Jones’ unhinged rhetoric, branded him “more talented than I am,” and supplied a fawning blurb for the bullshitting blowhard’s upcoming book.

“Maybe Alex Jones is onto something,” Carlson wrote of his pal on the back cover of The Great Reset: And the War for the World. “Read this book and decide for yourself who’s crazy.”

Carlson and Jones did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Subscribe to the Confider newsletter here and have The Daily Beast media team’s stellar reporting sent straight to your inbox every Monday night.

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