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Sports

All Blacks skipper Sam Cane laments shortcomings, adamant ‘we still have the belief’

Sam Cane loved the challenge, just not so much the response from his All Blacks as they plunged further into the rugby look in South Africa on Sunday (NZT).

Well beaten 26-10 by the world champion Springboks in the Rugby Championship opener at a seeingthing Mbombela Stadium, the All Blacks are plunging towards some pretty dark places, not to mention a further drop down the world rankings.

Not even the positive news in the aftermath that No 10 Beauden Barrett experienced had avoided “major injury” in his horrific fall that saw a red card dished out to South African speedster Kurt-Lee Arendse could lift the gloom surrounding the Kiwi tourists.

They have now lost five of their last six tests, three of four in 2022, and look for all money a team bereft of the attributes required to turn this around any time soon. There is a lot to fix, and for many dissatisfied rugby followers in New Zealand the SOS to Crusaders super coach Scott Robertson cannot go out soon enough.

Dejected All Blacks captain Sam Cane after their loss in Mbombela.

Christiaan Kotze/Photosport

Dejected All Blacks captain Sam Cane after their loss in Mbombela.

But before swords are fallen upon, or pink slips dished out, there is a rematch at an even more intimidating venue – the cauldron that is Ellis Park, the spiritual home of Bokke rugby (Sunday 3am NZT). Given the form the All Blacks are in, it shapes as a pivotal end to a telling fortnight in the republic.

Skipper Cane was doing his best to stay positive in the wake of yet another major All Blacks disappointment, but, unlike his coach, did not plunge down the spiral of denial. He was at least honest enough to concede it was another performance that left plenty to be desired.

“It’s one of the great challenges in test footy, playing South Africa over here, and the hostility of the crowd and the noise… if anything, and speaking on behalf of a lot of the boys, you love that backs against the wall , us versus them and the stadium situation.

“Early on they threw a lot of punches in terms of their attack and we did well to absorb a lot. I was pretty happy with where we were at in terms of the scoreboard going into halftime (3-10), considering we hadn’t got much going on attack. As it turned out we continued to not quite get enough going, and that was the test match.”

Sam Cane and the All Blacks had no answer to Springboks hooker Malcolm Marx on the charge or at the breakdown.

Gallo Images via Getty

Sam Cane and the All Blacks had no answer to Springboks hooker Malcolm Marx on the charge or at the breakdown.

Cane lamented the All Blacks’ inability to dictate terms at the breakdown where they found their momentum halted on multiple occasions. It was just one of many areas where the more urgent, more intense Boks dominated them

“One of the keys was our inability to get enough momentum, with Malcolm Marx, in particular, getting over the ball a number of times,” Cane added. “Normally it comes down to the ball-carrier winning the collision and then snapping the ball back in a long placement, but our cleaners were almost half a second off and he was winning that race. Once he gets in a strong position over the ball he’s one of the toughest in the world to move.”

So, top Marx to the Boks. Cane was also honest enough to concede, as impressive as the South African defensive linespeed and smothering tackles were, individual skillsets let the All Blacks down. “Test rugby is another notch up … it’s less time, more pressure, but it’s still about executing the same basic skillsets.”

But the beleaguered skipper, whose lack of impact (four carries for a single metre) continues to make him a target for the team’s legion of critics, was adamant the All Blacks had not lost belief in themselves or their coaches.

Another test, another inquisition for All Blacks coach Ian Foster after the 26-10 defeat to the Springboks in Mbombela.

Christiaan Kotze/Photosport

Another test, another inquisition for All Blacks coach Ian Foster after the 26-10 defeat to the Springboks in Mbombela.

“The belief is really strong within the group,” he added. “Even with five minutes to go, when the red card came, there was a genuine belief. It’s only something you can feel out on the field… the group’s belief in ourselves, and what we’re trying to achieve, is very high and when you’ve got that and an attitude to work hard, it’s a good recipe.

“We’ve just got to stick at it and it will turn. If we didn’t have those things in place, I’d be pretty worried, but the right ingredients are there.”

Ever the realist, Cane admitted the Springboks had been “awesome” in a clash they could easily have won by more.

“They know their game really well in terms of the set piece and trying to dominate the collisions and their kicking game created a lot of half-opportunities,” he said.

“But I don’t think there’s a lack of confidence in our team. We’re just not quite able to get across the line in terms of the performance we’re after, but we’ve certainly made some strides.”

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US

Verdict reached in Minnesota morning-after pill lawsuit

However, the jury found the pharmacist did cause the woman emotional harm in the amount of $25,000.

According to the original complaint, Andrea Anderson, a mother and a licensed foster parent, obtained a prescription in January 2019 for Ella — otherwise known as the “morning after pill” or emergency contraception — after her regular contraception failed.

Her doctor sent the prescription to the McGregor Thrifty White pharmacy, but the pharmacist on duty, George Badeaux, told Anderson that he would be unable to fill her prescription because of his “beliefs.”

Badeaux “did not clarify what his beliefs were or why they interfered with his ability to perform his job as a medical professional,” according to the complaint.

Anderson eventually found a pharmacy that was willing to fill her prescription — after driving over 100 miles round trip in a snowstorm, the complaint stated.

Badeaux’s attorney Charles Shreffler said in a statement he and his client were “incredibly happy with the jury’s decision.”

Contraception demand up after Roe reversal, doctors say

“Medical professionals should be free to practice their profession in line with their beliefs,” the statement said. “Mr. Badeaux is unable to participate in any procedure that requires him to dispense drugs that have the potential to end innocent human life in the womb. Every American should have the freedom to operate according to their ethical and religious beliefs. Doctors, pharmacists, and other medical providers are no different.”

CNN has reached out to attorneys for Thrifty White pharmacy for comment.

Gender Justice, the advocacy group representing Anderson, had argued that denying Anderson service based on her reproductive health care needs was illegal sex discrimination and violated the Minnesota Human Rights Act.

The group said it would appeal the jury’s decision to the state’s Court of Appeals.

“To be clear, the law in Minnesota prohibits sex discrimination and that includes refusing to fill prescriptions for emergency contraception,” Gender Justice Legal Director Jess Braverman said. “The jury was not deciding what the law is, they were deciding the facts of what happened here in this particular case. We will appeal this decision and won’t stop fighting until Minnesotans can get the health care they need without the interference of providers.” putting their own personal beliefs ahead of their legal and ethical obligations to their patients.”

Since a major pharmaceutical business deal in 2017, the so-called morning after pill has become America’s most widely used over-the-counter emergency contraception.
Since the overturn of Roe v. Wade, there are fears that some types of birth control won’t be available, and demand for longer-lasting birth control and emergency contraception, including the morning-after pill, has grown.

CNN’s Kieth Allen also contributed to this story.

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Categories
Sports

Champion Sydney Swans midfielder Josh Kennedy suffers injury blow

Sydney officials are sweating on the severity of champion midfielder Josh Kennedy’s potentially season-ending hamstring strain suffered in the VFL on Sunday morning.

Kennedy hurt his left hamstring lunging towards North Melbourne’s Tarryn Thomas as the Kangaroo burst out of the center in the second quarter at Arden Street Oval.

The Swans are referring to the 34-year-old’s setback as a strain but remain unsure of how serious it is. He won 10 disposals before limping from the field.

Kennedy’s injury coincided with Kangaroos star Ben Cunnington playing his first game in 379 days since being diagnosed with testicular cancer.

Cunnington, who won the first center clearance of the match, finished with 18 disposals and three tackles before calling it a day at three-quarter time.

Kennedy’s hopes of forcing his way back into the Swans’ senior side for finals now hang by a thread.

He was Sydney’s medical substitute last week but has otherwise played at second-tier level for the past month since missing eight weeks recovering from a serious right hamstring tendon injury against Carlton in May.

Swans coach John Longmire has consistently praised Kennedy’s attitude and leadership this season while he adjusts to going from an all-time club great to being a fringe member of the squad.

Kennedy is yet to indicate publicly whether he plans to continue into a 17th AFL season next year that would give him the chance to bring up his 300-game milestone.

The former co-captain has appeared only 11 times at senior level this season, which would be the lowest in his 13 seasons in Sydney after crossing from Hawthorn.

Kennedy’s honor roll includes playing in the Swans’ 2012 premiership, winning three Bob Skilton Medals as the club’s best and fairest and being a triple All-Australian.

He has won the most contested possessions (4006) of any AFL footballer since the statistic was recorded.

Read related topics:sydney

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Categories
US

Senate begins vote-a-rama, expected to last all night

The Senate shortly before midnight Saturday started an around-the-clock series of votes known as a vote-a-rama to wrap up work on the Inflation Reduction Act.

The vote-a-rama is a feature of the Senate budget process, which Democrats are using to pass a better climate, tax and health bill with 51 votes, bypassing a Republican filibuster.

The budget reconciliation process allows the party in control of the Senate to pass major legislation with a simple-majority vote but the trade-off is Democrats must allow Republicans to vote on an unlimited number of back-to-back amendments.

Each side has only one minute to make an argument for or against an amendment before a vote is called.

Votes on amendments that violate the Byrd Rule, which requires that legislation passed through the budget reconciliation process have a non-tangential impact on spending, revenues or the debt limit, are subject to procedural objections, which require 60 votes to be waived.

The first amendment of the vote-a-rama is one sponsored by the Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), which would require Medicare not to pay more than what the Department of Veterans Affairs does for prescription drugs.

The last vote-a-rama the Senate held in August of 2021 to pass the budget resolution lasted 14 hours and included consideration of more than 40 amendments.

Democratic senators say they expect this weekend’s vote-a-rama to last until 11 am or noon Sunday, judging by past experiences.

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Sports

Rugby Championship, Michael Hooper leave, mental health, explained, Australia return to play

When Michael Hooper withdrew less than 48 hours before the Wallabies’ Rugby Championship opener in Argentina, it shocked the world.

An outpouring of support was issued across the globe from Will Carling to Karmichael Hunt, as it was revealed that Hooper’s “mindset” was not right and he would miss the Test and fly home.

Yet for those closer to the situation, it was not as surprising.

RECAP: Wallabies’ stunning, bonus-point victory as Quade ruled out for the year

Wallabies bag late, late bonus point try | 00:43

Hooper has been pushed to the point of breaking for some time, with few others afforded time in the saddle in his position despite the emergence of talented players like Fraser McReight.

Instead, with precious victories and coaching living by results, the Wallabies – and Super Rugby franchises, perhaps with the exception of the Brumbies and recently the Waratahs – have rolled out their premier players for fear of failure.

A talismanic leader, Hooper had not only been holding the Wallabies together on and off the field for years, he had been putting his head in few places dare go.

The second youngest Wallabies captain of all time, Hooper was the youngest player of all time to play 100 Tests.

Last year, he surpassed George Gregan’s (59) record of Tests captained last year, and he is just 18 shy of the 1999 World Cup-winner’s national record of 139.

Michael Hooper withdrew less than 48 hours before the Wallabies' Rugby Championship opener.  (Photo by May Bailey/Getty Images)
Michael Hooper withdrew less than 48 hours before the Wallabies’ Rugby Championship opener. (Photo by May Bailey/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

All this at the tender age of 30, where he has been handed the captaincy by the past three Wallabies coaches after first being capped by another, Robbie Deans, in 2012.

At some point, age, or at least the sheer minutes he had spent on the playing field, he was going to catch up with him.

Of Hooper’s 121 Tests, he has started in 115 of them and gone the full distance in 95 of those Tests. He has missed just 11 Tests, including the weekend’s 41-26 victory over Michael Cheika’s Argentina, since his debut against Scotland off the bench in Newcastle.

By comparison, Richie McCaw, who started in 141 of his 148 Tests, missed 37 Tests during his decorated career.

Interestingly, in the four years before he retired following the World Cup final in 2015, McCaw started 44 of 45 Tests during the period but only played the full 80 minutes in 33 of those Tests.

But, as age, his durability and the weight of captaining the All Blacks for so many years caught up to him, he missed nine Tests during that golden period.

New Zealand Rugby also afforded him a sabbatical in late 2012 and saw him make his comeback in mid-2013. He didn’t play, but rather cooled his heels.

In May, Hooper laughed off suggestions he could make it through to the home World Cup in 2027 by saying he was more likely to be having a “beer” in the stands at that point.

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But it’s not just the home World Cup that feels like an eternity away for Hooper, it’s the 2025 British and Irish Lions series and, indeed, next year’s World Cup too.

It’s believed after years bouncing back up on a Sunday, the heavy knocks are starting to take their toll.

Recently, Hooper played in Brisbane against England despite being struck down by the flu during the week.

When he copped an early hit after being bounced by Ellis Genge, there was an element of concern around whether he had taken another head knock.

A week later, with the Wallabies’ injury toll stretching to double figures, he backed up for the series decider despite having a crook back.

Earlier in the year, Hooper copped a high tackle from a replacement Crusaders forward, which drew a red card, and he spent two weeks on the sidelines.

Privately the Waratahs and Australian officials were filthy because the culprit, Hamish Dalzell, had also been penalized for a high shot moments earlier that didn’t earn any further punishment.

Concussion is something Hooper is particularly cognizant of.

It’s also understood the Wallabies are being belted on the training field.

It is unclear when Hooper will next play. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

Numerous sources, including at Rugby Australia, have also raised questions about the strength and conditioning methods being used under Dean Benton.

Questions have arisen after a number of players have suffered injuries at training in recent months.

There is a belief that the current group needs to be whipped into shape because they are not up to Test match standards.

For now Hooper, who arrived back in Australia on Sunday, is expected to rest and spend time with his family.

No timeframe has been given when the No.7 will next play.

Sources believe he will miss the home Tests against the Springboks.

Fortunately the Wallabies have discovered they can play without Hooper and succeed.

But they might have learned too that humans are not machines.

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Categories
US

Lt. Gen. Michael Langley becomes Marines’ first Black four-star general

Langley will take command of the US Africa Command, which oversees the nation’s military presence in Africa, in a change of command ceremony at its Germany headquarters on Monday.

Speaking after the ceremony at Marine Barracks in Washington, DC, Langley said he was “humbled and honored for the opportunity to take on the stewardship of command of AFRICOM” as a four-star general.

“But the milestone and what it means to the Corps is quite essential. Not just because the mark in history, but what it will affect going forward, especially for those younger across society who want to aspire and look at the Marine Corps as an opportunity ,” I added.

Langley was nominated by President Joe Biden for promotion in June. The US Senate confirmed his promotion of him to four-star general by a voice vote earlier this week.
In remarks during Saturday’s ceremony, Langley paid homage to “those who have gone before,” recognizing Frederick C. Branch, the first commissioned Black Marine, and the Montford Point Marines, the first African Americans to enlist in the Marines who trained at a segregated facility in Montford Point, North Carolina.

He also spoke of the importance of diversity in the military to “maintain a decisive advantage over our strategic competitors.”

The Marine Corps had refused to recruit African Americans and other minorities until a 1941 executive order signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt that “forced the Corps, despite objections from its leadership,” to start recruiting Black Marines the following year.

Born in Shreveport, Louisiana, Langley graduated from the University of Texas at Arlington and has served with the Marine Corps since 1985.

He has commanded at every level and served in multiple continents, being deployed to countries such as Japan and Afghanistan over the course of his career.

He most recently served as commander of the US Marine Corps Forces Command and Marine Forces Northern Command and as commanding general of Fleet Marine Force Atlantic.

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Sports

AFL 2022 news: Patrick Cripps hit on Callum Ah Chee, video, Brisbane vs Carlton

Things went from bad to worse for Carlton on Sunday in the second quarter against the Brisbane Lions.

Being blown off the park as they found themselves down 38-2, the Blues needed a spark and skipper Patrick Cripps tried to deliver it.

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A long kick down the line from Adam Cerra was punched high into the air by Brisbane’s Daniel Rich and Lions teammate Callum Ah Chee camped himself underneath it.

As the ball came down, Cripps came in at a hundred miles an hour and launched off the deck and flattened Ah Chee with a nasty hip and shoulder.

The impact of the hit left Ah Chee flat on the Gabba surface as several Lions teammates remonstrated with Cripps.

Medical staff rushed to Ah Chee’s side and he remained hunched over on his hands and knees before he was able to get back to his feet and under his own power make his way off the ground.

To make matters even worse for Cripps and his upcoming date with the Match Review Panel, Ah Chee was subbed out of the game with concussion, Mitch Robinson took his place.

Cripps was sixth favorite for the 2022 Brownlow Medal on TAB markets, but his name will surely contain an asterisk on the AFL’s night of nights.

“He’s much more likely to be suspended than not. The AFL’s bottom line is if you choose to bump, you’re responsible for the fallout,” Jon Ralph said on Fox Footy during the halftime show.

“This is a textbook case. He jumps off the ground, it’s not a marking contest, he doesn’t really contest the ball, he braces rather than reaches for the ball.

“Ah Chee is subbed out so it is absolutely medium impact, potentially even high impact.”

Collingwood’s Brayden Maynard was rubbed out earlier in the year for a strikingly similar hit on GWS’ Daniel Lloyd that resulted in him missing two weeks.

“It’s a tough one to watch,” former Carlton star Eddie Betts said on Fox Footy.

Carlton’s place in the finals is on the line, currently sitting seventh on the ladder one game clear of the ninth placed St Kilda.

They finish the season with games against the reigning premiers Melbourne and the running-hot Collingwood.

Failing to win any and they could find themselves standing on the outside looking in and having to secure a win without their inspirational skipper could prove to be mission impossible.

Read related topics:Brisbane

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Australia

Climate bill passes lower house; Monkeypox vaccines secured; David Elliott, Matt Kean set for NSW leadership challenge; 2022 Commonwealth Games continue; NSW COVID cases grow, Victoria COVID cases grow

Richard Marles isn’t the only Labor frontbencher doing the half rounds this morning.

Health Minister Mark Butler was on the ABC’s RN Breakfast earlier, explaining why it took a while for Australia to announce it had acquired monkeypox vaccines.

Minister for Health and Aged Care Mark Butler.

Minister for Health and Aged Care Mark Butler. Credit:alex ellinghausen

More than 20,000 monkeypox vaccines (from a total of 450,000 secured doses) will arrive in Australia in the next few days.

“These were highly difficult to get hold of, as you [can] imagine,” Butler said.

“Monkeypox has only ever really been endemic in countries in Africa. And in the last 13 weeks we’ve seen it spread to 76 other countries, particularly in North America, and the UK and Europe. But we have 58 cases here in Australia as well.

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“So there’s been a burst of activity by governments to get their hands on the newest third-generation vaccine, which is the one we’ve got hold of. We’re now only one of a very small list of countries that has supplies coming to us in 2022.

“We’ve been talking for weeks now with state governments about how they’d roll them out.”

The health minister added that another 100,000 doses would arrive in Australia in the “next couple of months”.

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US

Abortion ‘sanctuary’ is too far for some in San Clemente

Linda Verraster cannot imagine why elected officials in San Clemente would spend time debating abortion.

The coastal Orange County city has no hospitals or clinics that perform abortions, and it has no power to stop residents from seeking the procedure elsewhere. There are other issues that need attention, Verraster says, like homelessness and affordable housing.

Still, a debate about abortion has been consuming the city and putting it in the spotlight, after Councilman Steve Knoblock proposed that it become a “sanctuary for life,” which would make it an abortion-free zone after the US Supreme Court overturned Roe vs. . Wade.

Knoblock’s proposal, which is largely symbolic, has upset residents across the political spectrum, including some of his conservative colleagues as well as abortion rights supporters like Verraster.

On Saturday, the council will consider whether to remove the proposal from its Aug. 16 meeting agenda.

“It’s so far out of their lane that it seems so ridiculous they would bring up something so divisive,” said Verraster, 68, a registered nurse and Democrat who has lived in San Clemente for nearly three decades.

The vibe of Orange County’s southernmost city, with its Spanish-style architecture and famous surf culture, is one of a laid-back beach town.

San Clemente also has an enduring reputation as a conservative bastion, even as much of Orange County has become more politically diverse.

Last year, the San Clemente council declared it a “Second Amendment Freedom City.”

A busy summer day at the beach south of the San Clemente pier on Thursday.

A busy summer day at the beach south of the San Clemente pier on Thursday.

(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

But Knoblock’s proposal, a draft of which was made public last week, was a bridge too far—even for some abortion opponents. It states that life begins at conception and opposes the establishment of clinics that provide abortions.

Councilmembers have been flooded with emails from residents perplexed by the document’s religious bent and angered that their government is weighing in on what many see as a personal health issue. Some residents plan to hold a rally next week near the San Clemente pier to air their concerns.

No matter what happens in San Clemente, the right to an abortion in heavily Democratic California will continue to be protected by state officials.

“This is really an exercise in chest pounding,” Fran Sdao, 69, told a Mission Viejo resident. “We live in California. This means nothing in California. This is just a waste of paper.”

In an interview with The Times, Knoblock said that zoning and permitting could be possible tools to keep abortion clinics out of the city.

Knoblock said he wants to send a message to the rest of California that “we think life is important, and we think 60 million unborn babies that have been killed in the womb is a sad thing and shouldn’t be continued.”

Knoblock has a history of proposals that many see as outside the purview of local government.

In 2008, I suggested that the council declare support for Proposition 8, a statewide ballot measure that would have banned same-sex marriage. He failed to gain enough buy-in from his colleagues.

That same year, Knoblock successfully advocated to have the phrase “In God We Trust” placed on the city’s logo.

Knoblock’s stance on abortion is at odds with the majority of Californians — and Orange County residents — who support access to the procedure.

Among likely voters in the state, 76% said they did not want Roe vs. Wade overturned, according to a poll this year by the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California. Support lagged just slightly in Orange County, with 69% of likely voters opposed to overturning the nearly 50-year-old constitutional precedent.

A Planned Parenthood clinic in Mission Viejo — the closest one to San Clemente — had more than 22,000 medical visits last year. It is unclear how many of those visits were abortions, though the organization said the procedure amounts to a fraction of the services it provides.

“This resolution is an example of an extreme politician that serves on the council basically attempting to push a personal agenda not reflecting the views of their constituents,” said Robert Armenta, senior vice president of public affairs at Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties .

Knoblock’s colleagues on the San Clemente City Council, which is majority Republican, described his proposal as overreach.

Councilwoman Kathy Ward called the proposal “ludicrous,” saying in an email to The Times that she does not “take up issues that are not city issues.”

Councilwoman Laura Ferguson said she believes in a woman’s right to choose, with certain limitations, and believes the council should focus on more pressing issues, like homelessness and pension liabilities.

Mayor Gene James, who is opposed to abortion, said he was initially in favor of a council resolution expressing support for the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. But he said he was “appalled” and “embarrassed” after reading the specifics that Knoblock drafted.

Ward, Ferguson and James are all Republicans.

“The fact that he was delving into issues of medicine, where none of us are qualified to opine on that, is disturbing,” James said. “California is a state where abortion is legal, and there’s nothing the San Clemente City Council can do about that, regardless of whether we’re pro-life or pro-choice.”

Mayor Pro Tem Chris Duncan, a Democrat who is running for state Assembly, said Knoblock’s efforts to ban abortion are “extreme and completely out of step with our community’s basic values.”

Cheri Lyon, who has lived in San Clemente for 15 years, said she was horrified that Knoblock’s resolution blurred the line between church and state.

The resolution states that its intention is to “not only protect life, but also to honor God, who gives life.” It continues that “we believe that life is God-ordained and God is the author and finisher of every life.”

“I read it and was like, ‘What is happening here?’” said Lyon, 46, who favors abortion rights. “It’s not even filled with an argument that it should be a state issue. It was all about God and preserving life. why [Knoblock] thinks this is something the citizens of San Clemente want is very perplexing to me.”

Lyon said she’s thankful to live in a state whose government has affirmed the right to an abortion but is concerned about what Knoblock’s resolution signals about the future of her city.

Residents and tourists walk along Avenida Del Mar on Thursday.

Residents and tourists walk along Avenida Del Mar on Thursday.

(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

San Clemente’s registered voters are about 44% Republican, 28% Democratic and 21% no party.

The city’s support for conservative candidates and causes dates back decades.

In the 1970s, Richard Nixon sought post-Watergate refuge in his beachfront mansion in San Clemente, known as the “Western White House.”

In 2020, San Clemente was the setting for a public mask burning at the pier led by Alan Hostetter, a resident later criminally charged for his alleged role in the Jan. 6 insurrection. Knoblock and Hostetter shared the stage at a Donald Trump rally in the city in 2020.

American flags and banners celebrating the US Marine Corps pepper homes across San Clemente, which is roughly 20 miles north of Camp Pendleton.

These days, lawn signs for liberal candidates, as well as gay and transgender pride flags, also appear in the city with more regularity.

Categories
Technology

LG CineBeam 4K UHD Laser UST Projector

LG’s new short-throw projectors are as impressive as they are convenient.

I’ve spent the past fortnight watching and playing everything I could on the company’s new CineBeam projector and if it wasn’t for a critical missing connection and its performance in daylight, I’d be tempted to replace my living room TV with one.

That being said, the technology doesn’t come cheap.

LG’s CineBeam projector and backlit Magic Remote. (Nine)

Setting up LG’s short throw projector is insanely easy.

Plug in the power cord, connect to WiFi and you’re done.

Depending on the distance between it and your wall, the CineBeam will throw up a picture between 80 and 120 inches in size.

There’s no automatic ‘key-stoning’ to straighten that image but you can manually adjust things in the settings or – as I did – take the easiest option and make sure the projector is straight…

Even against a wall, the CineBeam’s 4K image is undeniably impressive.

We gleefully rewatched Dr Strange in the Multiverse of Madness and guess who on a night away at the Peninsula.

The CineBeam’s image – like all projectors – isn’t as vibrant in day light. (Nine)

Most people wouldn’t dream of transporting a 120 inch screen but that proved no problem at all with a short throw projector like LG’s CineBeam.

LG has built in sensors that automatically adjust the projector’s brightness and colors depending on the content you’re watching and the darkness of the room it’s being used in but, like all projectors, the CineBeam’s picture suffers significantly in daylight.

Watching Collingwood play Port Adelaide with sun streaming through our living room windows was far from ideal, especially compared to the colour, contrast and clarity of my Samsung QLED which I had running side-by-side.

Closing the blinds obviously helps but that’s not an ideal solution in spaces being shared by multiple people or families.

The better news is that LG’s CineBeam 4K UHD Laser UST Projector handles down-lights incredibly well.

Lasers project the image at an extreme angle. (Nine)

I had no issues booting up my PlayStation 5 and playing through stray, returnal and games of Rocket League while my wife kept the lights on so she could read.

Other reviewers have criticized the lag they measured on the CineBeam while gaming, and while 50+ milliseconds certainly isn’t as responsive as the C2 OLED I recently reviewedI never felt like it was compromising my experience – even during some embarrassingly heated battles in the new Super Mario Strikers game on Nintendo Switch.
There’s 3 HDMI ports but no aerial connection. (Nine)

There are three HDMI ports on the back of LG’s short-throw projector plus two standard USB ports, an optical digital audio out port and a LAN port for a wired internet connection.

You may have noticed that I didn’t say there was a place to plug in a TV aerial.

It’s absence is immediately reinforced when you first turn on the CineBeam, as a pop-up informs you it needs a set top box to tune into Free-to-Air channels.

Being able to download apps like 9Now helps alleviate that to some degree but I was shocked to discover there was no option to install Kayo natively on LG’s CineBeam.

Thankfully I was able to rewatch Jamie Elliott’s match winner over and over again via the app on my PS5, but it’s disappointing that the projector isn’t a one-stop-shop for footy fans.

Speaking of software, the projector wasn’t able to read or display our wedding pictures inside a folder on a USB.

They’re JPG files that opened on LG’s C2 and my Samsung QLED just fine – and on the CineBeam when they weren’t contained in a folder – so I’m not sure why a folder is tripping the system up.

The CineBeam had no issues playing our wedding video off the same USB and ultimately, on a big screen like this, that’s what matters most.

Short throw projectors are the future for anyone wanting a big screen experience with minimal fuss.

I can’t say enough for the look and the convenience of placing projectors like LG’s on a TV unit (or dining room table like I have).

There’s no need to screw anything into a ceiling or wall and as a result, it’s perfectly portable.

My mind has been racing with ideas of using a projector like it in the background of future videos or for presentations; without the risk of blocking the picture.

Its minimalist design is suited for modern entertainment units. (Nine)

That extreme angle does have its flaws.

Light bleeds over the sharp edges of the bright white PS5 logo and into the black background when starting up the console.

It’s also worth noting that LG’s CineBeam 4K UHD Laser UST Projector hums away at a decent volume.

You can hear it from a few meters away in a quiet room but like most of the projector’s flaws, it’s quickly forgotten once something is playing on screen.

Whether or not it’s the right projector for you depends on where you want to set it up, what you want to watch and what accessories you have to play with.

But the convenience it offers coupled with LG’s slick interface and image quality makes the CineBeam 4K UHD Laser UST Projector hard to ignore.

LG loaned 9News.com.au a CineBeam 4K UHD Laser UST Projector for the purpose of this review.