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Entertainment

‘I lie about nearly everything’: Sydney mum’s parenting confession

Motherhood may look easy on your social media feed – sleeping newborn photos, matching mum and bub outfits and cute family adventures.

However what that curated view of parenthood doesn’t show is the all the hard stuff. The dinner time tantrums, the messy nursery and the constant feeling of exhaustion at the end of each day.

So while I do post a bunch of adorable photos of my toddler Noah, I’ve recently tried to make a conscious effort to use my Instagram as a platform to share the realities of motherhood.
LISTEN TO EPISODE SIX OF COME TO THERAPY WITH ME

Nikolina admits to not always being honest about motherhood. (Supplied)

For a long time I didn’t do this. As a mum I found it easier to lie about the state of my life, say everything was fine, than to admit to the chaotic truth of parenting.

During Noah’s first year of life I, as all parents, embarked on so many new and confusing journeys. Newborn sleep battles, breastfeeding struggles, developmental milestones, sickness, teething, starting daycare – I was always in the thick of a challenge.

But when family and friends would ask me how things were and how Noah was going – my response was always the same: “He’s great. We’re all doing great.”

The truth is we weren’t. I was anxious about sleep, dealing with food refusal, worried about milestones and up all night with a teething toddler – but I would never disclosed any of this.

READMORE: Sister accused of ruining mum-to-be’s ‘perfect labor plan’

I never admitted I was struggling.

And now I know why. Because I thought that by admitting things were not OK, I was in a way admitting defeat. That I was failing as a mum.

Or on the other hand I was scared. Scared of being judged for me parenting style and the way I decided to raise my child – from disciplining him to sleep training and everything in between.

Now I’m looking to get past this fear of defeat and judgment. I want to be brave enough to tell the truth and strong enough to admit when I am struggling.

Because surely that feels better than pretending? And surely it’s a lot less isolating.

Join me this week on Come To Therapy With Me as I tackle this issue with Dr Charise.

Join Nikolina as she opens up her heart and her mind. Listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or wherever you find your podcasts.

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Twin mum’s post-baby body stuns millions

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Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022 | Australia win final against India despite positive COVID test

Australia has added Commonwealth Games gold to its ODI and T20 World Cup wins after beating India in a thrilling final at Edgbaston.

In the final of T20 cricket’s first medal-paying appearance in the Commonwealth Games, India was cruising at 2-118 in reply to Australia’s 161 when they lost 3-4 in the space of two overs.

They then lost their last five wickets in the space of 13 balls to hand the gold to the Aussies.

READMORE: Rage erupts as Aussie boxer ‘burgled’ of gold

READMORE: Winner in scary state after ‘extraordinary’ finish

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The Australian camp was thrown into disarray before a ball was even bowled with all-rounder Tahlia McGrath returning a positive COVID test in the morning before the match.

The toss was delayed while the ICC determined if McGrath would play. The Commonwealth Games Federation RACEG (Results Analysis Clinical Expert Group) had already allowed her to do so.

McGrath had minor symptoms, and did not sing the national anthem alongside her teammates before the match.

When not on the field, she sat away from her teammates and wore a mask. She took it off to bat, but lasted just four balls.

When she took a catch during India’s innings, she had to shoo away teammates who had come over to celebrate.

Batting first, Australia made 8-161 thanks to 61 from Beth Mooney with cameos from Meg Lanning (36) and Ashleigh Gardner (25).

Australia picked up both Indian openers in the powerplay, before a big third wicket partnership between Jemimah Rodrigues (33) and Hermanpreet Kaur (65) threatened to derail the Aussie’s plans.

India needed just 44 runs from 34 balls when Rodrigues was bowled by Megan Schutt, before Gardner picked up the wickets of Kaur and Vastrakar in consecutive balls.

With two new batters at the crease, the Alana King and bowlers applied massive pressure before forcing a mistake between Sneh Rana and Deepti Sharma.

Needing 11 of the last over with two wickets in hand, skipper Meg Lanning threw the ball to Jess Jonassen, who to that point had figures of 0-20 from three overs.

Indian concussion-sub Yastika Bhatia stunned the Aussies by choosing to keep the strike after hitting the first ball to mid-on where an easy single was on offer. She hit the second to long off, triggering a runout while coming back for the second.

Back on strike, Yastika then tried to reverse sweep Jess Jonassen and was struck on the pads bang in front.

They reviewed it, but to no avail. The ball was clipping the middle bail and Australia were champions.

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US

Democrats celebrate as climate bill moves to House – and critics weigh in | US politics

Democrats celebrated the much-delayed Senate passage of their healthcare and climate spending package, expressing hope that the bill’s approval could improve their prospects in the crucial midterm elections this November.

The bill, formally known as the Inflation Reduction Act, passed the Senate on Sunday in a party-line vote of 51-50, with Vice-President Kamala Harris breaking the tie in the evenly divided chamber.

Raucous applause broke out on the Senate floor after Harris announced the final tally, and Democrats continued their victory lap once the vote had concluded amid a belief that the bill will give Biden – and many Democrats – a record of significant achievement to campaign on.

“I’m really confident that the Inflation Reduction Act will endure as one of the defining feats of the 21st century,” the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, said at a press conference after the bill’s passage. “To do small things with 50 votes is rough. To pass such a major piece of legislation – with only 50 votes, an intransigent Republican minority, a caucus running from Bernie Sanders to Joe Manchin – wow.”

Democrats’ work is not quite done though. The Senate-approved bill now heads to the House, which must pass the legislation before it can go to Joe Biden’s desk. The House is scheduled to return from its recess on Friday to take up the bill, and Democratic leaders have expressed confidence that it will pass.

“The House will return and move swiftly to send this bill to the president’s desk – proudly building a healthier, cleaner, fairer future for all Americans,” the Democratic speaker, Nancy Pelosi, said in a statement.

Democrats hope the bill’s passage could also help them persuade voters to keep them in control of Congress in November, when every House seat and 34 Senate seats will be up for grabs. So far, Democrats’ prospects in the midterm elections have appeared grim, as Republicans are heavily favored to regain control of the House of Representatives.

Asked on Monday morning whether he believed the bill’s approval would benefit Democrats running in November, Biden said, “Do I expect it to help? Yes, I do. It’s going to immediately help.”

Biden pointed to some of the bill’s healthcare provisions, including capping Medicare recipients’ out-of-pocket prescription costs at $2,000 a year, to argue that the legislation would provide concrete assistance to millions of Americans. But that policy will not go into effect until 2025, and Biden acknowledged that some of the bill’s most important provisions will take time to kick in.

That delayed implementation could prove detrimental to Democratic candidates trying to make a pitch to voters about how the party has made the most of its control of the White House and Congress.

Despite its name, the bill is also not expected to provide immediate relief to Americans struggling under the weight of record-high inflation. According to a report issued by Moody’s Analytics, the bill will “modestly reduce inflation over the 10-year budget horizon”.

Republicans accused Democrats of ramming through a partisan bill that failed to address voters’ top concerns, as polls show most Americans believe the economy is getting worse.

“Democrats have proven over and over they simply do not care about middle-class families’ priorities,” the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, said after the bill’s passage. “They have spent 18 months proving that. They just spent hundreds of billions of dollars to provide it again.”

Republicans’ talking points were echoed by a surprising voice on Sunday: Bernie Sanders. The progressive senator expressed concern that the bill would do little to help working Americans, after he unsuccessfully pushed amendments to the bill that would have expanded its healthcare and financial assistance provisions.

“It’s a very modest step forward,” Sanders told MSNBC. “Bottom line is, I’m going to support the bill because given the crisis of climate change, the environmental community says this is a step forward. It doesn’t go anywhere near as far as it should. It is a step forward.”

Democrats have championed the bill’s environmental provisions, which mark America’s most significant legislative effort yet to address the climate crisis. Experts estimate that the climate policies in the spending package will slash US greenhouse gas emissions by 40% by 2030, compared with 2005 levels. That accomplishment will bring the US within striking distance of Biden’s goal to cut emissions in half by the end of the decade, which scientists say must be achieved to avoid climate disaster.

To win the support of the centrist senator Joe Manchin, the bill also includes controversial proposals to expand oil and gas development on federal lands, which have sparked outcry among some climate activists. But the bill’s defenders say the climate benefits of the legislation far outweigh the costs.

As the spending package moves to the House, Pelosi has the weighty task of keeping her entire caucus in line to ensure the bill’s passage. Given Democrats’ narrow majority in the lower chamber, Pelosi can afford to lose only a few votes and still get the bill passed. It seems like Pelosi will have the votes she needs, after moderates and progressives alike endorsed the package, so Biden could be reaching for her bill-signing pen by the end of the week.

Categories
Technology

Netflix Has Some Great Games But Nobody’s Playing Them

Since last year, Netflix has offered its subscribers access to free video games. Now, data shows that less than one per cent of its users are actually playing any of these games. And while the streaming giant has announced more games coming to its service, very few of its over 200 million subscribers will likely care.

Back in November, Netflix began offering games as part of its subscription service, launching with five initial titles: Stranger Things: The Game, Stranger Things 3: The Game, Card Blast, Teeter Up, and Shooting Hoops. It’s since added more and now has over 25 mobile games that people can download through the Netflix app on either Android or iOS devices. Some of these games—like Into The Breach —are really good, too. And all of these games contain no ads or microtransactions.

As reported by CNBC, via data from app analytics company Apptopia, Netflix’s games have been downloaded just over 23 million times and have an average daily audience of 1.7 million. That might sound good on paper, but it’s basically nothing compared to Netflix’s 221 million subscribers. What this data seems to show is that about 200 million people who have access to Netflix’s library of games are currently not playing them or maybe don’t even know they exist.

Still, with a solid list of games that continues to grow, Netflix is ​​struggling to get anyone to care. Apptopia’s data shows that all of these games have a combined daily audience of 1.7 million. Meanwhile, there are hundreds of crappy mobile games that have twice that alone.

ReadMore: The 10 Absolute Best Anime On Netflix

Last year, Netflix COO Greg Peters told investors it plans to be “experimental” and will “try a bunch of things,” while explaining that the company is focused on “the long-term prize” of creating popular games that are “connected” to hit Netflix shows and movies.

And while Netflix says it will double its current game library by the end of the year, with only one per cent of subscribers playing these games, it’s hard not to wonder how long before the streamer decides its foray into gaming is too expensive and not worth Item?

Remember, Netflix is ​​currently facing a problem with keeping users. Since the beginning of this year, the streamer has lost 1.2 million subscribers. In response to downward trending numbers, Netflix has cut jobs, spending, and canceled shows. Building and supporting a library of games that can compete with Game Pass or Apple Arcade isn’t cheap.

For example, earlier this year, Netflix paid over $US70 ($97) million to buy up the studio behind a stranger things puzzle game. That ain’t nothing and in a time when the company is looking to cut costs and compete against other Foggers, it’s questionable how long it will continue to finance this gaming experiment.

Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games live: Australia finishes atop Birmingham 2022 medal tally as closing ceremony hands over to Victoria 2026

The closing ceremony of the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games has officially begun after 11 days of history-making sporting moments.

It comes after the Kookaburras won their seventh consecutive Commonwealth Games gold in the men’s hockey final, beating India 7-0 to give Australia its 67th and final gold of the Games.

Follow the closing ceremony live, see our athletes’ personal reflections of the Games and share your top moments from Birmingham 2022 by hitting the blue “leave a comment” button below.

live updates

By Kelsie Iorio

Our athletes: Clay Mason Stephens

Clay’s unwaveringly positive attitude (and incredible cork hat) really stood out to me these Games.

He said after his all-around final that despite missing out on a medal, he “enjoyed (it) regardless of the result because I chose to do so.” Something we can all take with us!

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By Kelsie Iorio

The athletes enter Alexander Stadium

Diver and Birmingham gold medalist Melissa Wu carried the Australian flag for us—this is her fifth Commonwealth Games.

Lots of athletes on Team Australia and from other nations have already gone home, so the closing ceremony is a little more casual. But it looks like they’re having fun.

By Jon Healey

Kashmir?

Sooooo, we have some more industrial workers doing some ‘Look down, look down’ type pushing and pulling of a very big metal structure. Looks like some sort of Mount Midoriyama.

But they’re playing Kashmir by Led Zeppelin, so all I can think of is this scene from Ocean’s 12.

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Ohhhhhhhhh, it’s a worker shortage. They couldn’t lift it by themselves, and then a huge influx of immigrant families have arrived to help them lift the big horizontal metal thing into a big vertical metal thing.

It lights up with the word “TOGETHER”, pointing to Birmingham’s famed multicultural diaspora.

Performers lift a metal structure at the Birmingham Commonwealth Games closing ceremony.
(Getty)

By Kelsie Iorio

Our athletes: Kaye Scott 🥈

Referees stopped the 38-year-old’s gold medal bout in the light middleweight boxing division, putting a quick end to her hopes for gold.

But her Birmingham silver is still one-up on her Gold Coast bronze since 2018, and as she says herself: “Silver isn’t too bad.”

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By Jon Healey

Come On Eileen kicks us off

After a recreation of Birmingham rebuilding and industrializing after World War II, Dexys Midnight Runners are out there doing their banger while dancers… work on an Amazon production line?

A man wearing unique attire sings into a microphone.
(Supplied: Seven Network)

Now they’re on the beers?! Lord Bezos won’t approve of that.

Performers hold up pints of beer during the Birmingham Commonwealth Games closing ceremony.
Rapidly, rapidly.(Getty)

By Kelsie Iorio

Our athletes: Tinka Easton 🥇

Tinka won Australia’s first gold medal in judo in two decades on her Commonwealth Games debut in Birmingham.

She says herself there are still big things coming — so it sounds like this won’t be the last we see of her.

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By Kelsie Iorio

Our athletes: Cedric Dubler 🥉

Cedric made headlines in Tokyo for his selfless drive that helped Ash Moloney to a bronze medal—well, this time, he’s got one of his own.

He stood alongside teammate and silver medalist Daniel Golubovic on the podium and says he’s “hungry for more”… or will, be after a nap. I’d be going for a lie-down after that too, mate.

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By Kelsie Iorio

Your thoughts on the Games:

Hey Jon 🙂 Hey Kelsie 🙂 I can’t recall a Comm games more awesome to watch than 2022.

-Natty

It’s been a good one, hey?

australian cricketers give each other a double high five
(Getty Images)

By Jon Healey

Our athletes: Emma McKeon 🥇🥇🥇🥇🥇🥇🥈🥉

What more can be said about this woman?

The swimming may feel like a lifetime ago, but six gold medals, one silver and one bronze in Birmingham is a pretty timeless achievement.

It adds to her haul from Glasgow 2014 and Gold Coast 2018, giving her TWENTY Commonwealth Games medals. The most of any athlete in history.

And let’s not forget she’s also Australia’s most decorated Olympian, with five golds and 11 medals overall. to freak.

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By Kelsie Iorio

Our athletes: Isabella Vincent

One of the babies of the Australian team and still in high school, Birmingham was Izzy’s first Commonwealth Games — but likely won’t be her last.

She says it’s been “an honor to rep the green and gold”and we hope to see this SA-based Para-swimmer again in Victoria in 2026!

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By Kelsie Iorio

Your thoughts on the Games:

Well donate all Australian athletes. I am so proud of you all. Each of you have given your all for our wonderful country.

-Lesley

We’re with you, Lesley!

Tell us your favorite moments of the games by hitting the blue comment button above ☝️

two australian athletes smile and wave on a podium wearing gold medals
Getty Images

By Kelsie Iorio

One final look at the medal tally

commonwealth games medal table with australia at the top followed by england canada india new zealand

It ended up pretty close — but Australia retains its place at the top of the tally with an incredible 67 gold, 57 silver and 54 bronze.

By Jon Healey

Key Event

🥈 Table tennis: Australia falls short in women’s doubles final

Table tennis players Jian Fang Lay and Minhyung Jee smile with their hands on their hips on the podium at the Commonwealth Games.
(AP)

Jian Fang Lay and Minhyung Jee were beaten 3-0 by Singapore pair Tianwei Feng and Jian Zeng.

Singapore started how they intended to go on, winning the first game 11-1. The last two were more contested, but both ended 11-8 in the favor of the Singaporeans.

Jee and Lay won bronze in the women’s team event last week as part of a six-medal haul for our table tennis team.

By Jon Healey

Key Event

🥈🥉 Diving: Silver and bronze in mixed events

Shixin Li and Maddison Keeney grab the back of their legs as they flip during a synchronized dive.
(AP)

last night Shixin Li and Maddison Keeney picked up silver in the mixed 3m springboard synchronized event.

They finished just 1.98 points behind winners Scotland, as both Aussie divers picked up their third medals of this Games.

climbing higher, Cassiel Rousseau and Emily Boyd added bronze in the synchro off the tall tower.

It’s Boyd’s first medal in Birmingham, while Rousseau added to his 10m gold and men’s 10m synchro bronze.

Emily Boyd and Cassiel Roussea touch their toes during a synchronized dive.
(AP)

By Jon Healey

Key Event

🥇 Hockey: Kookaburras maintain Commonwealth dominance against India

An Australian hockey player smiles and pumps his fists while holding a hockey stick.
(Getty)

SEVEN!

The Australian men’s hockey team have won Commonwealth Games gold seven straight times.

This time they did it with a thumping 7-0 win (how fitting) over India.

Jacob Anderson and Nathan Ephraums scored doubles, usual suspects Flynn Ogilvie and Blake Govers got on the board too, as well as Tom Wickham.

It’s Australia’s 67th and final gold medal in Birmingham.

By Jon Healey

It’s almost over, fam

Hello and welcome to this, our final blog of the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham.

We’ve got a couple of medals to wrap up before the closing ceremony, and we’ll also bring you some athletes’ reflections on the 2022 Games.

Leave a comment and have a chat with us using that button up there!

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Categories
Australia

EPA investigates cause of Lake Macquarie fish kill as hundreds wash up dead at Mannering Park

Authorities are investigating what caused hundreds of fish to wash up dead on the banks of Lake Macquarie in New South Wales last week.

Lake Macquarie is a saltwater estuary that covers about 110 square kilometers on the state’s Central Coast.

Gary Graham has been living in Mannering Park for nearly 70 years and said he had “never seen a fish kill of this magnitude.”

“We’ve had a few fish kills previously… but this is an enormous fish kill,” he said.

Resident of 56 years Shane Peters felt the same.

“It’s very smelly. We’ve never seen anything like this,” he said.

Both men believed the event could have killed most of the fish in the lake.

Man wearing fluro yellow polo shirt stands in front of a lake
Gary Graham and Shane Peters used a wheelie bin to clean up fish from in front of their homes.(ABC Newcastle: Andrew Lobb)

‘Greying around the gills’

The Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) said it collected water samples for laboratory analysis after they were alerted to the incident at Mannering Park on Friday afternoon.

Small white fish with yellow eye lays dead under floating grass
Hundreds of dead fish washed up on the shores of Lake Macquarie on Friday.(Supplied)

“Since initial inspections, the EPA has observed hundreds of dead fish of various species and sizes,” a spokesperson said.

“Field officers also noted graying around the gills, which could suggest oxygen depletion.

“A decrease in oxygen content in water is a natural event that can cause rapid fish deaths.”

Man standing in shallow water picks up a dead black ray
A NSW Fisheries officer removes a dead eagle ray from the banks of the lake.(Facebook: NSW EPA)

Residents embark on clean-up

Mr Graham estimated the number of fish that had washed up dead on the foreshore outside his home was in the order of thousands, not hundreds.

Prompted by the smell of rotting fish over the weekend, he said he and his neighbors filled an entire council wheelie bin with fish carcasses found out the front of four waterfront properties.

Black ray with white spots submerged in shallow water
An eagle ray was among the dead marine animals found by Lake Macquarie residents.(Supplied: Gary Graham)

He said these included juveniles, large flatheads and even a mature eagle ray.

“We’re probably looking at 100-plus kilograms of fish,” Mr Graham said.

“And I must say it was distressing picking up all sorts of fish. There was no discrimination.”

The EPA has instructed the local council to remove and dispose of the dead fish.

several dead, white fish on sand
Dead fish are still rotting on the shores of the coastal saltwater lake.(ABC Newcastle: Andrew Lobb)

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Categories
US

Torrents drench Denver as Death Valley recovers from 1,000-year deluge

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Flash flood warnings were posted for parts of Denver on Sunday night as exceptional downpours overwhelmed roads, stranded cars and forced high-water rescues.

The flooding in Denver came about 48 hours after a historic deluge in Death Valley, Calif., on Friday that stranded about 1,000 people and was classified as a 1-in-1,000 year event. And the Death Valley flood followed three 1-in-1,000 year rain events across the Lower 48 to close July and begin August in St. Louis, eastern Kentucky and southern Illinois.

Excessive rainfall continued to plague parts of the Lower 48 on Monday morning, with counties west and south of Chicago under flash flood warnings after seeing up to half a foot of rain.

Every deluge is operating in a warmer atmosphere because of human-caused climate change and is capable of unleashing more extreme amounts.

In Denver, thunderstorms blasted parts of the northern metro area on Sunday evening, drenching them with up to an inch and a half of rain in just 20 minutes. In some areas, rainfall of this intensity is only expected to occur every several hundred years.

Numerous roads were closed, including a section of Interstate 70. Denver’s ABC affiliate described a “traffic nightmare” with drivers stranded for hours along the interstate and nearly 20 people needing rescue.

“Looks like our heaviest report came in at 2.5 inches of rain,” said David Barjenburch, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service office in Boulder, although radar showed the possibility of locally higher amounts.

I have explained that most areas only had storms for about 40 minutes at any given location. They were moving at about 15 mph.

“This is the peak [time of year] in terms of monsoonal rainfall,” said Barjenburch, referring to the Southwest monsoon — a seasonal wind shift that helps moisture to drift north over the desert Southwest, Four Corners region and, at times, the Colorado Front Range. “July, early August is typically our flash flood season. And this time we had abundant moisture, a lot more than we typically have here.”

He referred to infamous flood events, like one that struck Fort Collins in 1997 or the Big Thompson episode, which killed 144 people when a foot of rainfall gushed into the Big Thompson River in just a few hours’ time on July 31, 1976.

The people stranded in Friday’s Death Valley deluge were able to “carefully travel out through damaged roadways” over the weekend, according to the National Park Service.

About 1.46 inches of rain came down — just shy of the 1.47-inch record. The total equates to about three-quarters of a typical year’s worth of rain.

The lowest, driest and hottest location in the United States, Death Valley averages just 0.11 inches of rain in August.

Many cars were damaged by the sudden torrent and resulting mudslides.

The Park Service reported that the flooding destroyed a water system that serves numerous park residences and facilities. It also said that many thousands of roads were damaged and littered with debris.

Flash flood in Death Valley strands about 1,000 people in national park

Like Denver, its downpours were triggered by the Southwest monsoon.

Flooding in northern Illinois

Parts of Illinois west and south of Chicago were also visited by heavy rain early Monday, which sparked flash flood warnings in northwestern and north central parts of the state. The Weather Service office serving Chicago had received about a dozen reports of flooding, including around Rockford through midday.

“[T]he significant flash flooding has gotten as close to the metro as Rockford and Byron, Illinois, about 90 miles west of Chicago,” said Matt Friedlein, a meteorologist at the Weather Service. “DeKalb and Sycamore… about 70 miles west of Chicago… saw some flooding too.”

Friedlin said Rockford broke its Aug. 8 rainfall record with 2.62 inches as of 7 am One weather station south of Rockford posted 6.21 inches.

A brief slug of heavy rain passed through Chicago, but its impacts were limited.

Explaining the exceptional rainfall

The heavy rainfall has been driven by characteristic summertime moisture pooling along a stalled front draped from the Colorado Rockies into central states sitting atop a heat dome sprawled over the Southern US Such fronts wring the humidity out of the air like someone squeezing out a washcloth. That can lead to rainfall rates of 2 to 3 inches — or more — per hour. These fronts also act like train tracks guiding developing thunderstorms over the same areas repeatedly.

That was the case eight days ago in St. Louis, where 7.87 inches of rain fell in six hours’ time. That prompted flash flood emergencies across the city, and cars inundated by rising floodwaters. Extreme flooding plagued eastern Kentucky just two days later, with 37 people now confirmed dead. President Biden, who visited the region on Monday, has pledged assistance from the federal government in recovery efforts. Another storm dropped up to 14 inches of rain late last week near Effingham, Ill.

Biden visits flood-stricken Kentucky ahead of bill signings this week

As the atmosphere continues to warm, events of this magnitude will become increasingly common. That will translate to increased economic losses, damage to vulnerable and aging infrastructure, and danger to the public, particularly in urban areas.

In the past two weeks, we’ve observed four 1-in-1,000 year rain events. That doesn’t mean that level of rainfall occurs once every thousand years, but rather that in any given year it should have a 0.1 percent chance of occurring.

A limitation of the 1,000-year rainfall metric is that it is based on historical data and on the assumption the climate isn’t changing. As the atmosphere continues to warm, and its capacity to store and transport moisture increases, this metric loses its meaning as previously rare events become more common.

Categories
Sports

New Zealander Aaron Gate wins road race and claims his fourth medal at Commonwealth Games

New Zealand’s Aaron Gate took his fourth gold medal at the. 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, using his fast sprint finish to win the men’s road race after a tactical battle and an aggressive race between the leading nations.

Geraint Thomas (Wales) made a late solo attack with less than two kilometers to go but he was pulled back by the England and Australian riders, which in turn helped lead out Gate in the sprint to the line.

Categories
US

Trump complained his generals were not ‘totally loyal’ like Hitler’s, book reveals

Donald Trump complained to his most senior aide, then-chief of staff John Kelly, that he wanted the US’s top generals including retired military figures to show him absolute, unquestioning loyalty while specifically pointing to Nazi Germany as an example.

In a bizarre exchange described by reporters for The New Yorker and New York Times in an upcoming book Mr Trump is said to have asked his top aid, who himself was a four-star general in charge of US Southern Command, “[W]hy can’t you be like the German generals?”

A bewildered Mr Kelly reportedly responded, “Which generals?” to which Mr Trump supposedly shot back, “The German generals in World War II.”

His chief of staff then allegedly told the president, “You do know that they tried to kill Hitler three times and almost pulled it off?”

But the president in response substituted his own version of history.

“No, no, no, they were totally loyal to him,” Mr Trump reportedly insisted to his aid.

The excerpts were published on Monday in The New Yorker. The Divider: Trump in the White House, by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser, is due to be released in September.

Mr Kelly served as chief of staff through the first half of Mr Trump’s tumultuous four years in office, joining after the exit of Reince Priebus. He has imposed some order on the rowdy group of Trump loyalists in the West Wing, including clashing with Steve Bannon, the ex-Breitbart News chief, and eventually ousting him.

He left the office in early January 2019. Surprisingly, the remarks reported on Monday are not the first approving words the ex-president has been accused of making about Nazi Germany and its leadership in conversations with Mr Kelly in particular. He is said to have told Mr Kelly, “Well, [Adolf] Hitler did a lot of good things” during a 2018 trip to France alongside his top advisers, a statement first reported by Michael Bender of The Wall Street Journal for his own book about the Trump presidency. Mr Trump denied making those remarks through a spokesperson after the book’s publication.

The former president had a troubled relationship with top American military brass while in office. He at first appeared to be seeking to align his administration with the views of the US military establishment by staffing a number of top positions in his White House, including his chief of staff position, with retired generals like Mr Kelly and James Mattis.

But by the end of his presidency he had clearly fallen out of favor with those same retired brass (and they with him as well) and was re-embracing the politicians and loyalists who made up much of his inner circle. In June of 2020 he received some of his most withering criticism made by a former member of his administration when Mr Mattis responded to the use of law enforcement officers to clear peaceful protesters from a park outside of the White House so that the president could take part in a photo op.

“Donald Trump is the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people — does not even pretend to try,” Mr Mattis wrote at the time. “Instead he tries to divide us.”

Categories
Technology

Savic electric motorcycle launching this year in Australian first

The future is well and truly in 2022 as Australia’s first and only high-performance electric motorcycle revved its engine during its launch tour in Canberra last week.

Motorcycle pioneer and CEO and founder of Savic Motorcycles, Dennis Savic, is leading the Australian two-wheeled electric vehicle charge.

He designed, developed, and assembled the industry-leading motorcycle, and it’s set to roll off the assembly line later this year.

Hitting speeds of 100km in just three and a half seconds and reaching a range of 200km, the C-Series motorcycle’s riding ability is far from its only perk.

Features include on-board AI systems, customizable dash with on-board controllers continually collecting data and providing over-the-air software updates and remote diagnostics, and a versatile charging setup removing the need for special at-home equipment.

“Anywhere you can charge a phone, you can charge a Savic. Our motorcycles come with an adapter that plugs straight into a wall outlet, or you charge at a faster rate on a Level 2 charger, which are popping up in a lot of new residential apartments, shopping centers, hotels, and gyms,” Mr Savic said.

“We’ve also got our own app so you can connect to your bike through your phone and book services and see the status of it.”

This venture has been a long time coming for the almost 30-year-old. At 14, I decided he wanted to build an auto business in the future and while at university he “fell in love with motorcycles”.

Launched in 2015 as a humble start up, Savic Motorcycles is now emerging as a leading developer of high-performance electric vehicles, still within an affordable price range.

Based in Melbourne, Mr Slavic has built the bikes from the ground up, and says they’ve been passing some major engineering milestones lately.

“We like them for two reasons: one is freedom in terms of design, we really like that, and then, two, is the performance and the technology you can build into them. The whole team is very passionate about the product,” he said.

Mr Savic believes the whole motorcycle industry is transforming towards electric models.

“We do see this as the future of motorcycles… but we’re a bit biased,” he smiled.

“Our goal is to disrupt the world’s two-wheeled EV industry as a revolutionary brand and share our passion for carbon-free travel without ever compromising on performance.”

After receiving some funding to help his electric motorcycle venture along, he said they’re continuing to work with government to scale manufacturing in Australia, boosting the country’s renewable economy and resources.

“The environmental impact is a by-product. I’m more passionate about the design and performance, and the environmental thing is a bonus,” Mr Savic said.

“We’ve also made sure the structural parts of the motorcycle are made out of aluminum, which is able to be recycled in the second life battery recycling program.”

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