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US

Secret Service Turns Over Agents’ Cell Numbers to Jan. 6 Committee

  • The Secret Service has provided a list of agency-issued phone numbers to the Jan. 6 House committee.
  • The unusual move will allow investigators to determine which agents’ records to review, ABC reported.
  • The Secret Service has faced criticism for deleting text messages sent during the attack on the Capitol.

The US Secret Service has turned over a list of agency-issued cell phone numbers to the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, according to reports by ABC and CNN.

The “highly unusual” move to release agents’ numbers will allow investigators to determine which officers’ records they wish to review as part of their investigation, ABC first reported, and could indicate a renewed effort by the agency to cooperate with investigators.

CNN reported the current USSS director, James Murray, is delaying his retirement to oversee the agency’s cooperation with investigators.

“I feel strongly about using this time to oversee and ensure our agency’s continued cooperation, responsiveness, and full support with respect to ongoing Congressional and other inquiries,” CNN reported Murray said in a message to his workforce.

The records are being released after the agency faced criticism that it deleted text messages from agents’ phones that could have possibly been used as evidence in the investigation.

As part of a separate, agency-wide investigation connected to the attack on the Capitol, ABC reported, the inspector general responsible for the Secret Service also obtained a listing of personal cell phone numbers for the agents.

Deleting agents’ text messages may have violated federal record-keeping laws and caused the loss of potentially relevant information regarding the events of Jan. 6

House Oversight Chair Carolyn Maloney and Homeland Security Chairman Bennie Thompson have accused the independent watchdog that oversees the Department of Homeland Security of covering up parts of its investigation into the missing messages.

“We are writing with serious new concerns about your lack of transparency and independence, which appear to be jeopardizing the integrity of a crucial investigation run by your office,” the lawmakers wrote in an open letter to Trump-appointed DHS Inspector General Joseph Cuffari. “These documents also indicate that your office may have taken steps to cover up the extent of missing records.”

Thompson and Maloney have called for Cuffari to remove himself from oversight of the investigation, saying his delayed disclosure to Congress about the deleted Secret Service records casts “serious doubt on his independence and his ability to effectively conduct such an important investigation.”

Categories
Sports

The six things we learned from Round 21

We’ve made it through 21 rounds with just a fortnight remaining before finals kick off.

With the finish line edging closer by the day, here’s what we learned from a crucial weekend of football.

Ed Langdon’s comments were good for footy

We all heard Ed Langdon’s “one-trick pony” and “all duck, no dinner” Collingwood comments on SEN’s The Run Home in the lead-up to Friday’s big clash.

While Melbourne’s media manager may have been pulling their hair out at the statement, it was great for us as footy fans.

With the fuse lit for what already was one of the most anticipated games of the home and away season, we were treated to a match-up with a perfect storyline as well as top-four ramifications.

Somehow, what played out on-field exceeded the hype and expectations surrounding it and it was seriously refreshing to hear that honest talk coming from a player’s mouth ahead of a game.

While Langdon was eventually made to eat his words as the Magpies prevailed in the thriller, his comments added extra spice that we’re not often used to as supporters.

Pleasingly, it seemed like Langdon’s words were taken in good jest by fans and the media alike, hopefully, we see more of it.

There’s only one spot in the top eight still up for grabs

We’re 21 rounds in and six teams have officially qualified for finals with Geelong, Collingwood, Melbourne, Brisbane, Sydney and Fremantle all booking their September ticket.

While that leaves two spots for the likes of Carlton, Richmond, St Kilda and the Western Bulldogs to fight for, it looks like only one of them is truly under threat.

Given Richmond’s position inside the eight and relatively easy run home with Hawthorn and Essendon to come, it’s Carlton on 12 wins who’ll be feeling shaky.

Although they probably only need one more win to make it, their next fortnight has them billed to play Melbourne and Collingwood, two teams that will finish higher than them in 2022.

There’s no doubt this team has enough talent to play finals and they would’ve expected to be there at 8-2 after 10 rounds.

It’s a simple equation, one more win should see them get there, but the Bulldogs and Saints will be hot on their tail should they drop next Saturday’s game to the Demons.

Collingwood needs to put a contract in front of De Goey

Collingwood midfielder Jordan De Goey has had a stellar two weeks since returning from a quad injury.

In two consecutive wins against quality opposition, the 26-year-old has arguably been his side’s best player, and there’s almost no doubt the Magpies don’t prevail over the Demons without him.

While the club pulled a contract off the table following the highly-publicized Bali incident, it’s time they put one back to him based on his on-field output.

Sure, whatever deal has to have incentives and behavioral clauses given his past, but he’s simply too good a footballer for Collingwood to let go of – particularly as he’s previously stated he wants to stay.

Craig McRae described De Goey’s one-goal, 25-disposal, nine-clearance performance as his best of the year and given that he helps remedy one of Collingwood’s glaring issues at the contest, his worth should be known at the AIA Centre.

The coach also said it best post-match when he said he hopes he stays.

Collingwood fans will be hoping he can convince the club’s board to see things similarly.

Kane’s right, Bolton is the best player in the competition

SEN’s Kane Cornes boldly claimed last week that Shai Bolton was the best player in the competition, and he might just be right.

The All-Australian lock was superb for Richmond again in their win over Port Adelaide on Saturday with another game-breaking performance.

With all of his touches turning to gold, Bolton’s 17-disposal, four-goal outing was again the spark the Tigers needed to win.

The dynamic star has kicked an impressive 39 goals this season while averaging 18 disposals and eight score involvements, but just imagine if he kicked straight.

On top of multiple out on the fulls, Bolton has booted 39 behinds this campaign, proving how many times he’s getting scoring opportunities.

If he does tidy up that one aspect of his game, there’s no doubting he could easily be a 60+ goal-a-year player, and that’s while playing a mix of wing, half forward and midfield.

He may be the hardest match-up in the AFL, there’s almost no player you’d rather have in your team right now.

GWS, where has that been all season?

Mark McVeigh stunned many last week after he slammed his players following the disastrous loss to Sydney, but it looks as though the message was heard.

After accusing the majority of his players of checking out, the Giants’ pressure and attempt was clear to see in their 27-point win over a resurgent Essendon side.

While it would be pleasing to see that the group is still playing for each other and the jumper, McVeigh must be wondering where that mentality has been over this season as they’re destined to finish in the bottom five.

It was going to be hard to salvage 2022 after Leon Cameron’s departure, but this team has far too much talent at the right age to be one of the competition’s worst teams.

Winning football is based on pressure, and it’s disappointing to see that it hasn’t clicked this year at GWS until seemingly now.

They’re so much more capable of what they’ve shown.

It’s a big week for Melbourne

While many still have Melbourne as the best team in it, are we sure they make the top four?

Friday’s loss to Collingwood was their sixth from their last 10 games and they now sit a game behind the top two sides.

Given that they’re on equal points with both Sydney and Brisbane, five can’t fit into four and the Demons aren’t locked into a double chance spot at all.

With Carlton and Brisbane (away) to come before the season’s out, Melbourne desperately needs to take care of the Blues on Saturday night before the big Gabba test awaits them in Round 23.

Their best is, without doubt, good enough to have them win both games, but that’s easier said than done given their recent form.

If they’re to finish top four next week is critical, let’s see if they can make themselves feel more secure with a win against a team that’ll be fighting for their lives.





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Categories
US

House catches fire as storm rolls through with lightning, downpours

A MetroWest home was demolished late Friday night, just hours after lightning ignited a fire that quickly spread. The blaze started in the middle of an intense thunderstorm that pummeled the region with lightning and downpours.Video shows firefighters responding to the home on Sears Road before 4 pm At the time, a strong thunderstorm was moving through the area.Southborough fire chief Steven Achilles said it was a lightning strike that hit the chimney that started this fire. Three firefighters were transported to the hospital with injuries battling the blaze, Achilles said. Two firefighters had broken bones and one suffered a hand injury during a so-called flashover incident. “They had fire above them, and the heat kept on coming down and down, and it got fresh air, and basically the second floor engulfed in fire,” Achillies said “Crews had to bailout down the stairwell, Achillies said. “Some of they got injured when that happened.”Southborough police say several homes were struck in the area during the storm. “We know we had some trees down and some other lightning strikes, but no other structure fires,” Achillies said. Approximately 50 members from various departments helped battle the fire.StormTeam 5 Interactive Radar recorded several strikes in the area around Sears Road.StormTeam 5 Meteorologist Mike Wankum said the intense storm activity was fueled by the day’s heat and humidity.A fire believed to be caused by lightning caused the death of an 84-year-old woman in New Hampshire on Thursday night, fire officials said.The fire marshal’s office reminded residents to make sure they have working smoke alarms and clear exits in their homes.

A MetroWest home was demolished late Friday night, just hours after lightning ignited a fire that quickly spread.

The blaze started in the middle of an intense thunderstorm that pummeled the region with lightning and downpours.

Video shows firefighters responding to the home on Sears Road before 4 pm At the time, a strong thunderstorm was moving through the area.

Southborough fire chief Steven Achilles said it was a lightning strike that hit the chimney that started this fire.

Three firefighters were transported to the hospital with injuries battling the blaze, Achilles said.

Two firefighters had broken bones and one suffered a hand injury during a so-called flashover incident.

“They had fire above them, and the heat kept on coming down and down, and it got fresh air, and basically the second floor engulfed in fire,” Achillies said

“Crews had to bailout down the stairwell, Achillies said. “Some of them got injured when that happened.”

Southborough police say several homes were struck in the area during the storm.

“We know we had some trees down and some other lightning strikes, but no other structure fires,” Achillies said.

Approximately 50 members from various departments helped battle the fire.

StormTeam 5 Interactive Radar recorded several strikes in the area around Sears Road.

StormTeam 5 Meteorologist Mike Wankum said the intense storm activity was fueled by the day’s heat and humidity.

A fire believed to be caused by lightning caused the death of an 84-year-old woman in New Hampshire on Thursday night, fire officials said. The fire marshal’s office reminded residents to make sure they have working smoke alarms and clear exits in their homes.

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Categories
Entertainment

Florence Given: ‘People don’t want you to break the mould… I needed to’ | Books

FLawrence Given is an illustrator, writer and feminist activist. She started her Instagram page as a 17-year-old art student in Plymouth to showcase her quirky feminist illustrations: it now has almost 600,000 followers, and her merchandise has won fans including Rita Ora, who asked her to design products for her 2018 tour . Given’s first book of her, Women Don’t Owe You Pretty, sold 100,000 copies and spent months on the bestseller lists. In 2019, cosmopolitan named her its influencer of the year, and this year she launched the exactly podcast, for which she has interviewed women including Jameela Jamil, Munroe Bergdorf and Sofie Hagen. Her novel debut of her, girl crushis the story of Eartha, a young bisexual woman who becomes an overnight internet celebrity.

What prompted you to turn to fiction for your second book?
I wanted to write a book that showed that people are messy, and I wanted to create messy characters. Nothing makes me feel better than making people laugh, making people think, and also gently holding the mirror up to the reader so that they can reflect on themselves in a way that doesn’t feel judgy or shameful.

Social media is a theme in the book. How do you manage boundaries as an influencer?
The hardest thing for me is to extrapolate who I would even be without the internet. Social media is my gateway to the world and to making connections with people. When it comes to the physical boundaries I have with my phone: it’s never in my bedroom, it’s always charging in the kitchen. And when it comes to what you share online, I always take a beat.

Sexuality comes up here, and in your other work. What are you most interested in communicating?
I’ve described Eartha as a hot bisexual mess. The thing is, particularly for bisexual people, we don’t really feel like there’s a home. And then there’s home in that chaos, and not really knowing what you are.

As an out bisexual woman myself, and as someone who has a podcast with an advice section, I get hundreds of questions from women every day. Most of them are: “Am I bisexual? I don’t know if I am.” And I can’t tell people! I’m not you. I don’t have the answers. I don’t know your life. What I wanted to do in this novel is to say that it’s OK not to know. And it’s OK to be confused.

Women Don’t Owe You Pretty was a concise, witty, compassionate guide to navigating feminism. Did it achieve what you wanted it to?
It’s sold in Tesco: women have come to my book events saying: “I’ve never considered myself a feminist. I bought your book because it looked pretty. And then I came out the other end of it saying no to my husband, growing out my armpit hair, telling him when I don’t want to have sex.” I want women who think that they haven’t got the education to be a feminist to talk about this stuff. It should not be gate-kept.

What got you started?
I was a teenager in Plymouth and I experienced sexual harassment in a nightclub for the first time. All of my friends were, like: Floss, that’s just the way things are. I would complain about it and I would be shut down by other women. And that’s what I didn’t like: I couldn’t believe it was happening to me. I was at art college studying fashion, and there was a segment on fashion illustration. You could do what you wanted with your illustrations. And I just fused this anger with the naked women that I was drawing. And then I put it online because no one in my life was listening to me.

An illustration by Florence Given.
An illustration by Florence Given.

You moved to London. Did you feel that you couldn’t do what you wanted to in Devon?
It was a wonderful place to grow up. I have so many amazing memories there. But I went to an all-girls’ school, and if anyone tried to break the status quo it was a bit like a cult. Someone betrays the cult or does something different to the cult, you’re shamed and you’re trying to worm your way back in. In small towns in general, people don’t want you to actually break the mould, and I needed to. There weren’t even many queer bars in Plymouth – there was one for gay men. I needed something to pull me out of it. And I have been thriving since I found people I love so much.

What’s the difference?
My friends have never spoken to me about their weight. We openly talk about sex we have, we openly talk about masturbation, and we’re very honest about our feelings with one another. We say no when we want to. But it is also because my friends are queer or they’re bisexual.

I do have a few straight friends though. I made friends with a group of straight people last year, just based on music tastes alone; an amazing group of women. And I’ve never heard people talk about their bodies so much. It was a shock to me because I hadn’t been around it for a while and I couldn’t believe it.

Can you explain why young people adore Love Island, when it seems like such a throwback from a feminist perspective? How progressive is the younger generation?
I don’t think I can explain it to you because I agree that Love Island is awful, but I still think it’s entertaining as hell. I can see why people are drawn to it, because it’s entertainment. It’s funny. That’s just reality TV. My generation is a lot more progressive [than previous generations]: we’re learning. So many more people are coming out as trans and queer because there are examples of it now. And I don’t think that you can ever give yourself permission to be something that you feel unless you see an example of it.

What’s next?
I’ve been asked if I’d like to go into politics. Nope! I’d be awful at it. I know my strengths. I’m a writer, I’m an artist. And I’m good at talking. But I don’t want to be a politician. I want to write books for the rest of my life.

girl crush by Florence Given is published by Brazen (£16.99). To support the Guardian and observer order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

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Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022: Michelle Jenneke result, 100m hurdles final

Michelle Jenneke has missed out on a bronze medal but just 0.09 seconds as she finished fifth in the final of the 100m hurdles at the Commonwealth Games.

The 29-year-old was just 0.02 seconds off her personal best with a negative wind blowing in her face and it still wasn’t enough for a medal as she fell away in the final 40m.

Defending champion, world champion and world record holder Tobi Amusan won the gold in a Games record time of 12.30 seconds.

Jenneke’s time — 12.68 seconds — was just 0.03 seconds off the previous Games record, but in a lightning race all three of the best runners smashed that previous record.

Aussie athletics great Tamsyn Manou said on Channel 7 after the race that Jenneke would be happy with the result and will be filled with confidence as she begins her preparation for the 2024 Olympics in Paris.

It was another brutal end for Jenneke after she also missed out on a bronze medal at the 2018 Gold Coast Games by just 0.01 seconds.

The difference this time is that the field was red hot, with five of the runners also featuring in the World Championships final last month in Oregon.

“I would have liked another PB, but it wasn’t to be today,” Jenneke told Channel 7 after the race.

“To back up my run from worlds, go fast with a slight headwind there… so really happy with that performance. It’s just tough when you’re racing a field of that quality.

“That’s the fastest race there has ever been at the Commonwealth Games.”

She went on to say how happy she is that she has resurrected her career after so many injuries set backs in recent years.

“I had a pretty rough two years. There were times people in my inner circle were saying to me, ‘Are you sure you want to be doing this?’ And I was just saying back to them, ‘I’ve got more in me’. It shows that I have and I’m really glad I could show the world what I’m capable of,” she said.

Fellow Aussie Celeste Mucci also ran an impressive race to finish seventh.

Jenneke had run the fastest time of her life — 12.63 seconds — two days earlier to thunder into the final, but the time did not count as a new personal best because it was wind-assisted.

Jenneke also ranked a career-saving personal best time of 12.66 at the World Championships.

Jenneke’s time in Oregon made her the second-quickest women’s 100m hurdler Australia has ever produced, behind only Sally Pearson.

She said after the semi-final that she was in “the shape of my life”.

She said her peak physical condition is simply the result of finally being able to have a stretch without injuries where she could get in an extended training block.

“I haven’t really changed things. It’s just one of those things where I’ve been able to string together some training where I haven’t been injured,” she said.

“So I’ve actually been able to get every session done. When you do that things seem to come together. That’s really all it is. Nothing too special.”

Jenneke had finished fourth at the 2018 Games on the Gold Coast, but she did it in a time of 13.07 seconds.

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Categories
US

Viktor Orbán turns Texas conference into transatlantic far-right love-in | CPAC

“The globalists can all go to hell,” declared Viktor Orbán. “I have come to Texas!”

The crowd roared, whooped and gave a standing ovation as if at a campaign rally for former US president Donald Trump. It was evident they saw in Orbán a kindred spirit – a blunt weapon to wield against liberal foes.

The Hungarian prime minister was the opening speaker at this week’s Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Dallas, Texas, and perhaps the most vivid demonstration yet of the mutual and rapidly growing affinity between the far right in America and Europe.

Orbán, who has been prime minister for 12 years, boasted about his hardline stance on illegal immigration, law and order and “gender ideology” in schools. I have touted a rise in marriages and fall in abortions. He was unapologetic in his defense of blood-and-soil nationalism and contempt for “leftist media.”

And extraordinarily for a foreign leader, he overtly sided with an opposition party – the Republicans – rather than the incumbent Democrats, paying homage to Trump at his golf club in Bedminister, New Jersey, while ignoring Joe Biden at the White House.

Calling for Christian nationalists to “unite forces”, Orbán told CPAC: “Victory will never be found by taking the path of least resistance. We must take back the institutions in Washington and in Brussels. We must find friends and allies in one another. We must coordinate the movements of our troops because we face the same challenge.”

He noted that US midterm elections will be later this year followed by the presidential contest and European parliamentary elections in 2024. “These two locations will define the two fronts in the battle being fought for western civilization. Today, we hold neither of them. Yet we need both.”

Rarely has the alliance between nationalist parties across the Atlantic been so bold, overt and unshackled. CPAC was once the domain of cold warrior Ronald Reagan. But in recent years guest speakers have included the Brexit cheerleader Nigel Farage and Marion Maréchal-Le Pen, niece of the far-right French politician Marine Le Pen.

Viktor Orbán basks in the applause at CPAC in Dallas.
Viktor Orbán basks in the applause at CPAC in Dallas. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters

On Friday the lineup included Steve Bannon, who has worked with openly racist far-right leaders across Europe and once leased a medieval monastery outside Rome to run a “populism bootcamp”.

Bannon is former executive chairman of Breitbart News, which he once described as “the platform of the ‘alt-right’”, a movement associated with efforts to preserve “white identity” and defend “western values”. He served as chief strategist in the Trump White House and is now facing prison after being convicted of contempt of Congress for failing to comply with the January 6 committee.

CPAC Texas also heard from the Georgia congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, who railed against the media and told the audience: “When I said that I’m a Christian nationalist, I have nothing to be ashamed of because that’s what most Americans are.” The event will close on Saturday with Trump who, like Orbán, has faced scrutiny over his relationship with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

Peter Montgomery, a senior fellow at the non-profit group Right Wing Watch, said: “Rightwing leaders, and especially the religious right leaders in the US, love Viktor Orbán for the same reasons they love Vladimir Putin. This overt embrace of Christian nationalism, willingness to use strongman tactics and the power of the government to enforce so-called traditional values ​​about family and sexuality.”

Montgomery added: “We’ve actually seen some signs of that illiberalism and authoritarianism on the Trumpist right in their efforts to ban the teaching of racism in schools, in their aggressive attacks against LGBTQ materials and information in schools and libraries, and even their encouragement of harassment and violence that we’ve seen against election officials and school board members.

“All those signs are signs of a disturbing embrace of authoritarianism on the US right and Orbán is a model and a hero for that to them.”

Orbán has few bigger fans than Tucker Carlson, a Fox News host who interviewed him during a week-long broadcast from Hungary last year. Carlson has promoted “great replacement theory” – the baseless claim of a plot to turn white people into a minority through immigration – in 400 of his shows, according to an analysis by the New York Times.

The Fox News host Tucker Carlson delivers a speech via a videolink at a previous CPAC event held in Budapest, Hungary, on 19 May 2022.
The Fox News host Tucker Carlson delivers a speech via a videolink at a previous CPAC event held in Budapest, Hungary, on 19 May 2022. Photograph: Szilárd Koszticsák/EPA

Orbán’s visit to the US came amid backlash over anti-migrant remarks in which he warned that Europeans must not “become peoples of mixed race” and cited The Camp of the Saints, a 1973 French novel by Jean Raspail that portrays a dystopia in which a flotilla of south Asian people invades France. The novel has also been promoted by Trump allies such as Bannon and Stephen Miller.

Rick Wilson, co-founder of the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump group, said: “Orbán represents a quiet part out loud element of today’s Republican party. That quiet part out loud is the overt appeal to racial politics, the not-bothering-to-hide-it white supremacy element of the global alt-right and authoritarian movement. Donald Trump was the thing that let it loose in the US.

“Orbán has struck a set of blows against the media in Hungary, which is one of their main targets here. He has overtly embraced the sort of white replacement politics that are so popular with the Tucker Carlson set and a lot of the other folks that are members of the American Maga [Make America great again] movement.”

Wilson, author of Everything Trump Touches Dies, added: “Those things have all added up to giving Orbán a kind of fanboy following in the US of people who were eleven conservative Republicans and who are now racially driven authoritarian wannabes. He’s the guy who’s pulling it off at a scale that Donald Trump didn’t achieve in the US.”

That appeal includes a stealth attack on democracy. Critics say that Hungary’s judiciary, media and other institutions are suffering death by a thousand cuts as Orbán slowly and surely consolidates power. His rightwing Fidesz party has drawn legislative districts in Hungary in a way that makes it very difficult for opposition parties to win seats – not dissimilar to partisan gerrymandering efforts for state legislative and congressional seats in America. The process currently favors Republicans because they control more of the state legislatures that create those boundaries.

And at CPAC, purveyors of Trump’s “big lie” – the false claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him – held prominent slots. Mike Lindell, chief executive of MyPillow, pushed preposterous conspiracy theories about voting machines. Several speakers denounced the congressional investigation into the January 6 insurrection as a sham.

Trump merchandise for sale at CPAC.
Trump merchandise for sale at CPAC. Photograph: Go Nakamura/Reuters

Kurt Bardella, an adviser to the Democratic National Committee, said of Orbán: “They see a blueprint for fascism. They see someone who embodies the Republican party’s values ​​of obstructing free and fair elections, of undermining democratic institutions, of expanding government power and politicizing the judicial branch, marginalizing minority communities and corrupting the pillars of a free society.

“When you talk about an autocratic regime, that’s what Prime Minister Orbán is in Hungary and it’s exactly the blueprint that Republicans are hoping to follow here in the United States of America. It’s not surprising in the least that, especially in a place like CPAC Texas, these rightwing white nationalists are embracing someone like Orbán.”

Earlier this year, when CPAC held an event in Europe, it naturally chose Hungary. Orbán remains an outlier on the continent – ​​for now. Le Pen lost the French presidential election to Emmanuel Macron, though she gained the far right’s biggest share of the vote yet. In Italy Giorgia Meloni, leader of a party with neofascist origins, is strongly positioned to become prime minister after snap elections this autumn.

Robert P Jones, founder and chief executive of the Public Religion Research Institute thinktank in Washington and author of White Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity, said: “There is this identifiable movement. The difference in many of the European countries is it is represented in minority parties.

“In the US now, I think it’s safe to say that this ethno-religious vision of the country has taken over one of our two major political parties. Even demographically speaking, nearly seven in 10 Republicans are white and Christian today in a country that’s only 44% white and Christian. You can see that identity taking hold as the animating beating heart of the party. It’s a really dangerous situation.”

Categories
Technology

A Duo of Google Meet Apps Is Officially Here, and It’s Confusing

Google is officially kicking off the merger of its two video chat apps, Google Meet and Google Duo. Google announced the merger in June, with the plan to keep the Google Meet brand name while merging the best of both code bases into the Google Duo app. According to Google’s PR email (no links, sorry), people will begin seeing Duo’s app and website branding swap over to Google Meet this week. Google’s various rebrandings are all on a rollout, so they’ll arrive at different times for different people, but Google says the complete rebrand should finish for everyone by September.

So Google Duo is being rebranded to Google Meet, and the existing Google Meet app is sticking around for a bit. That means there are now two apps called “Google Meet.” Google has a help article detailing this extremely confusing situation, calling the two Meet apps “Google Meet (original): The updated Meet app” and “Google Meet: The updated Duo app.” The “Google Meet (original)” app will someday be put out to pasture; it’s just sticking around while Google rebuilds the meeting functionality on top of Google Duo. Did everyone follow that?

The Meet and Duo video services were both built as reactions to Google’s far more stable communication competition. Google Meet was technically created in 2017 as a group business video chat application called “Google Hangouts Meet,” but it really became a major project after Zoom’s growth exploded in 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic. Google Meet was still locked behind a paywall during the initial months of the work-from-home era, and while it eventually became as easy to use as Zoom, it was after Zoom became a household name.

Google Duo came out in 2016 alongside the “companion app” Google Allo as a reaction to the growth of WhatsApp. Google and Facebook got into a $22 billion bidding war for WhatsApp two years earlier. Google lost and spent the next two years making a WhatsApp clone called Google Allo. Rather than integrate video chat into the app, Google split video functionality into a separate app called Google Duo. WhatsApp didn’t have video chat at the time, so you could use Google Duo video chat with Facebook’s WhatsApp or Google’s Allo, if you wanted.

Allo and Duo were originally focused on India, which led Duo to build a one-to-one video chat system that used little bandwidth and worked well on unstable connections. That efficient video chat system will be the basis for the new combined app, with Google building Meet’s meeting link functionality into Duo and rebranding it. The install base is probably also a factor here. As a default Android app, Google Duo has more than 5 billion downloads on the Play Store while Meet only has 100 million. Google’s path makes for a smoother transition for those 5 billion installs, while the 100 million will have to switch manually. Google says that it will hide the old, original Google Meet app from app store searches in September. Eventually, it will need to implement a pop-up message for existing users of the old Google Meet app that tells them to upgrade.

This move is happening because Google “unified” its messaging teams in 2020, with a single person, Google Workspace VP and GM Javier Soltero, taking the reins of “all of Google’s collective communication products.” That should mean Google Hangouts, Google Meet, Google Chat, Google Messages, Google Duo, and Google Voice, and Google even threw in the Android phone app for good measure. It was announced last month that Soltero is leaving Google, though, so that’s only two years on the messaging unification job. Nobody knows who, if anyone, is taking over as the new “head of messaging.” Single’s plan is still happening, though—besides this Meet and Duo merger, Hangouts will finally shut down in a few months. This new, more cohesive lineup will leave one Google video app and three Google chat apps.

This story originally appeared on Ars Technica.

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Categories
Entertainment

As Melbourne season opens, watch Shane Jacobson transform into Edna Turnblad

The transformation of Shane Jacobson into Edna Turnblad, the housebound matriarch of the stage show hairspray, is meant to take about 25 minutes, but today runs closer to an hour. It’s the first dress rehearsal for the musical set in 1962 Baltimore, and Jacobson isn’t just going the full Edna, he’s also got to get rid of the full beard before the makeover can even begin.

“There’s a small team of panel beaters that come in and make this happen,” he says while meticulously running an electric shaver over his face to remove every last bit of stubble.

Shane Jacobson emerges as Edna Turnblad at the Regent Theatre, Melbourne, for Hairspray.

Shane Jacobson emerges as Edna Turnblad at the Regent Theatre, Melbourne, for Hairspray.Credit:Chris Hopkins

Jacobson, who is best known for his knockabout turns as dunny plumber Kenny and pie-munching cop Barry in Jack Irishas well as his love of muscle cars, will spend a good chunk of the next few months with make-up artists and costumiers in this poky sliver of a room backstage at the Regent Theatre, a building where all the grandness is definitely out front .

“I feel naked without a beard, I really do,” he says as the last of his shadow disappears, until 5 o’clock tomorrow anyway. “If I could grow hair over my eyes and nose, if I could be Teen Wolf, I would.”

Now make-up artist Beth Haywood can start work. First she makes her eyebrows disappear – not for good, just beneath a healthy daubing of wax. Then the foundation goes on, lots of it. Next are the false eyelashes, the eyeliner, the lipstick. Finally, it’s time for the wig – and today it’s Edna’s glamorous outdoor do, the one she dons when she finally manages to overcome her shame over her body size and leave the house.

But even for a natural showman like Jacobson, some things are off limits, and we’re ushered from the room at this stage; apparently being photographed while stripped naked so he can slip into a female bodysuit is where he draws the line. Funny that.

Edna has always been played by a man, from Divine in John Waters’ 1988 film to Harvey Fierstein in the original 2002 Broadway production, to John Travolta in the 2007 film based on the musical based on the film. But according to Matt Lenz, who was associate director on that first Broadway show and is in Australia to direct this revival, which opens on the 20th anniversary of its New York debut, it is not really a drag role.

“I think it’s an acting role. It just happens to be played by a man,” he says. “Over the years we’ve thought, ‘Well, why don’t we just cast a woman?’ But the John Waters aspect of it, that slightly warped perception of the world, would somehow be lost.”

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Sports

F1 2022: Daniel Ricciardo’s lifeline at Alpine not quite what it seems, Oscar Piastri, McLaren

The Daniel Ricciardo-Oscar Piastri saga is only getting more complicated by the day.

The F1 world erupted when it was revealed McLaren had told Ricciardo it plans to replace him with the young Australian driver next season despite Ricciardo being contracted for 2023.

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The decision sent fans into a spin, with many slamming McLaren for its treatment of Ricciardo.

The development means Ricciardo’s F1 career is in limbo, and his future could take a long time to settle because McLaren will likely face a challenge from Alpine over its poaching of Piastri.

Alpine’s handling of the saga has come under the microscope and Guanyu Zhou, Alfa Romeo’s rookie driver, says he’s “happy” to be free from the shackles of the team where he was part of the junior academy alongside Piastri.

“I’ve been completely released,” Zhou said when asked about how his career is going away from the French team.

Zhou, who effectively leapfrogged Piastri in the pecking order to snag the lone spare seat on this year’s grid, is glad he hasn’t found himself “stuck” at Alpine like Piastri.

“Everything worked out very nicely, because my contract was ending at the end of last year and it was up to both of us if we wanted to continue, but then there was an opportunity with Alfa,” he said.

“So the deal was definitely not to continue with Alpine, because I didn’t see anywhere I could have a seat for next year or for this year. And Alfa and Alpine are quite big competitor brands – not just in Formula 1 but in general.

“It was not easy to get out of Alpine but I’m very happy that everything worked out well because if I had another year I’d be kind of stuck, the same now with Oscar.

“So it’s not the best thing for me. I feel like there was an opportunity here so I went for it, and I think it was a very good decision.”

Alpine boss Otmar Szafnauer has said he is open to Ricciardo to return to the team, formerly known as Renault, where he spent two underwhelming seasons in 2019 and 2020.

But such a return could be more complicated than it seems. RacingNews365 reported earlier this year AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly has a clause in his contract that would allow him to join a rival team.

The clause comes with one condition — that said team is placed higher than AlphaTauri in the standings.

Alpine is currently higher than AlphaTauri in the constructors’ championship, meaning Gasly, who is French, could choose to join Alpine.

Piastri’s agreement with McLaren has reportedly been validated by F1’s Contract Recognition Board, and Alpine’s botched handling of his contract is unlikely to fill Ricciardo with confidence.

There is still plenty to play out in F1’s silly season but Ricciardo’s future is becoming increasingly unclear.

The 33-year-old could return to Alpine to replace Fernando Alonso, or move to Alfa Romeo alongside Valtteri Bottas.

Ricciardo has made it clear he wants to stay in F1 so it’s unlikely he’ll be interested in a move to McLaren’s IndyCar team.

There remains the possibility Ricciardo could find himself out of the sport altogether and forced into an early retirement, which would be a shocking turn of events for one of the most marketable drivers in F1.

Regardless of where he ends up, Ricciardo can expect a whopping payout from McLaren if he is indeed given the flick with a year remaining on his deal.

Read related topics:Daniel Ricciardo

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US

Lawrence Jones has a message for Eric Adams over border crisis: There’s no ignoring it now

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Lawrence Jones slammed NYC Mayor Eric Adams’s call for the Biden administration to use federal dollars to address the influx of migrants from the border only now that migrants are arriving in NYC. Former acting ICE director Tom Homan called for an end to sanctuary city policies on “Cross Country.”

LAWRENCE-JONES: It’s no secret the border crisis has fallen into the Democrats’ laps. There’s no ignoring it now. we saw secret migrant flights land in New York for months. We were there. We followed the bus full of illegal migrant passengers as they were dropped off and allowed to enter this country freely. But it was only when another busload arrived on Eric Adams’s doorstep that he called for the Biden administration to intervene. Friday morning, a group of migrant men, women and children arrived straight from Texas.

BORDER CRISIS HITS HOME IN DC, SO MAYOR BOWSER FINALLY CARES

Migrants aboard a bus from Texas arrive in New York City's Manhattan borough, Friday, Aug. 5, 2022.

Migrants aboard a bus from Texas arrive in New York City’s Manhattan borough, Friday, Aug. 5, 2022.
(FoxNews)

JONES RIPS LAWMAKERS OVER BORDER CRISIS: THEY WERE ALL ABOUT COMPASSION UNTIL THEY WERE ON THEIR LAWNS

TOM HOMAN: Sanctuary cities are a magnet that causes people to come to this country. They can go to New York City. They can get a driver’s license. They can get a job. If they have an immigration proceeding, they use taxpayer money in New York City to help defend them in immigration proceedings. If they get arrested for a crime, they won’t be turned over to ICE, they’ll be released back into the community to re-offend. Who the hell wouldn’t want to go to New York City if you’re an illegal alien? So he didn’t say a word when the Biden administration is flying people into New York in the middle of the night. But the minute a Republican governor does it, he has an issue. If he wants to solve this crisis, number one, get rid of sanctuary city policy… [Eric Adams] used to be a cop—he needs to start acting like one.

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