Categories
Sports

Adelaide Crows camp, Eddie Betts book, Bryce Gibbs, Josh Jenkins, reactions, response, commentary, AFLPA

Fox Footy pundits have called for those at the Adelaide Football Club responsible for the infamous 2018 pre-season camp to take accountability for the wrongdoings, saying the “cover-up is the issue” and the misuse of players’ personal information is “harrowing. ”

Shocking new details of the pre-season camp emerged this week in Eddie Betts’ recently released biography, while fellow former Crows Josh Jenkins and Bryce Gibbs also spoke out on their distressing experiences.

While Crows CEO Tim Silvers, who wasn’t at Adelaide in 2018, apologized to Betts, five-time All-Australian Nick Riewoldt believes current club bosses shouldn’t necessarily wear the brunt of the criticism given many weren’t at West Lakes at the time.

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Jenkins full statement on infamous camp | 15:39

“I don’t know if it’s necessarily about punishing the Adelaide Crows. Because a lot of the people who were at the Adelaide Crows at the time have moved on. So is it fair to punish the Crows?” I have posed.

“I think the responsible people need to put their hand up and actually show some accountability. There were people saying in the aftermath, ‘we laugh at the some of the things we hear about the noise around the camp.’ Well it clearly wasn’t a laughing matter, it was a really, really serious matter.

“Those that were responsible for the investigation and actions need to be held accountable.

“I think actually putting your hand up and being on record and explaining why and how. And why the cover up? Why has it taken four years for this to happen and reach the point that it is.”

Collingwood legend Nathan Buckley agreed that concealing the details of what happened is most damning and concerned players were pressured into staying silent.

“The cover-up is the issue, because I’ve got no doubt the leadership of the Adelaide Football Club didn’t think they were going to undermine the fabric of the organisation,” he said.

“When you hear the anecdotes of the players and the way that information was used, it’s harrowing.

“It seemed to me the way the exit was planned, saying, ‘this is how you should talk about this,’ that there was an element of keeping that in the same little (group).

“Collective Minds, who were the outside facilitators, they’ve been quite litigious with this. They’ve slapped, rigged and tried to quiet this down. I’ve got no doubt it’s been very difficult for the Adelaide Football Club to be fully transparent in some ways, because of the litigious nature of the third party, and that makes it pretty tough for them.”

“Our game betrayed him” Robbo on Betts | 01:02

Triple-premiership winning Lion Jonathan Brown says it highlights the risks of bringing “outside facilitators” into a footy club.

“At the end of the day if that’s the player’s experience and that’s the way they perceived what happened, you have to take those things on face value,” the ex-Brisbane skipper said.

“It’s a great lesson, you need to get on the front foot and you need to apologize and own up to your mistakes, because people make mistakes all the time.

“I’m not sure about outside facilitators, you’ve got to be careful you bring outside facilitators into your football club. You’ve certainly got to check their CV and make sure what their reputation is and experience, because that was a bad decision for the club to bring them in.”

The AFLPA (Players Association) this week indicated it would effectively reopen its investigation into the pre-season event and contact all players for a “better understanding” of what occurred, saying it would’ve taken more immediate action had it known all the information from the outlet.

However Riewoldt questioned why the players union didn’t probe the incident more thoroughly four years ago.

“Why wasn’t it investigated properly? The people who represent the players — the Players Association — why didn’t they fight the fight properly for the players back then?” I have posed.

“Aren’t we resilient enough?” | 02:00

“They’re all questions that need answering… a lot of people have let them (the players) down. But if the Players Association don’t exist to fight for the players in situations like this to protect the players then what do they exist for?”

Former Adelaide coach and current Swans assistant Don Pyke also apologized for the 2018 pre-season camp amid growing scrutiny for his role in it.

Pyke departed the Crows at the end of 2019 and has been linked to several coaching vacancies amid praise for his impact at the Swans, admitting the idea of ​​being a senior boss again was enticing.

Asked if it hurts his future coaching aspirations, Brown said: “It does at the moment, whether it does in years down the track.”

Buckley agreed that “in some ways it does” affect Pyke’s chances in the short term, but pointed out that other coaches have previously pushed the boundaries with programs.

“You think back to legendary coaches of the past, I reckon if you got the worst things they’d done… there’s probably been some pretty average things players have been exposed to in the view of building resilience and being tougher and drawing the group together,” he said.

“Not all of them have gone right.”

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Categories
US

US will defend Philippines if attacked in South China Sea: Blinken

In meetings in Manila dominated by discussion on simmering US-China tensions over the Taiwan visit of US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Blinken said a 70-year-old defense pact with the Philippines was “ironclad.”

“An armed attack on Philippine armed forces, public vessels and aircraft will invoke US mutual defense commitments under that treaty,” Blinken told a news conference.

“The Philippines is an irreplaceable friend, partner, and ally to the United States.”

Blinken was the most senior US official to meet new President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr., the son of the late strongman who Washington helped to flee into exile in Hawaii during a 1986 “people power” uprising that ended his two-decade rule.

In opening remarks to Blinken, Marcos sought to downplay the diplomatic flare-up over Taiwan and said he believed Pelosi’s trip “did not raise the intensity” of a situation that was already volatile.

“We have been at that level for a good while, but we have sort of got used to the idea,” Marcos said.

The Philippines is a fulcrum of the geopolitical rivalry between the US and China and Marcos faces a tricky challenge in balancing ties between the two major powers.

He will also face domestic pressure to stand up to China in the South China Sea, without angering its leadership.

US-Philippines ties were shaken by predecessor Rodrigo Duterte’s overtures towards China, his famous anti-US rhetoric and threats to downgrade their military ties.

On Saturday, Philippine Foreign Secretary Enrique Manalo said President Joe Biden had invited Marcos to Washington, and both sides were working on a suitable date.

Marcos has not been to the US in more than a decade, due largely to a contempt of court order for his refusal to cooperate with a Hawaii court, which in 1995 ordered the Marcos family to return $2 billion of missing state wealth to victims of abuses by the state under his father’s rule.

Marcos Jr. and mother, Imelda, also face a $353 million fine.

The US embassy in Manila has said heads of state have diplomatic immunity.

Manalo said Washington was an important ally, but concerning nearby Taiwan he told Blinken the Philippines “looks at the big powers to help calm the waters.”

“We can ill afford any further escalation of tensions,” he said.

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Categories
Sports

UFC Fight Night 2022, Thiago Santos vs Jamahal Hill, time, how to watch, Bryan Battle knockout, video, reaction, record

It has not even been a year since Bryan Battle won The Ultimate Fighter 29 but the 27-year-old has quickly risen up the ranks and just made his biggest statement yet.

Entering the octagon for his welterweight debut, Battle (8-1 MMA, 3-0 UFC) landed a thundering head kick to send Takashi Sato to the canvas (16-6 MMA, 2-3 UFC).

It secured Battle a brutal knockout win just 44 seconds into the fight.

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Tough as nails Aussie makes Dana applaud | 01:28

“Bryan Battle wants everyone to know he is for real,” Brendan Fitzgerald said in commentary.

“Stop doubting him. He was still feeling a little bit disrespected and under-the-radar in anticipation of this fight.”

Sato had not been finished with strikes since 2015 but Battle said post-fight that the head kick was something he was aiming to use, perhaps not that soon though.

“It’s crazy,” Battle said.

“It’s something that we saw, it’s something we anticipated. I didn’t see it happening quite so soon. That was probably the most beautiful strike I’ve ever thrown.”

It certainly earned Battle plenty of accolades from former UFC fighters Rashad Evans and Din Thomas, who were sitting octagon-side during the fight.

Bryan Battle made a statement.
Bryan Battle made a statement.Source: FOX SPORTS

“Oh my God, that kick was absolutely amazing,” Evans said.

“The timing on it was absolutely perfect. He got Sato throwing a punch at the same time as he was throwing a punch and then followed through with a kick. It was just absolutely amazing. Just the sound of it was nasty.

“It put him right out. Bryan Battle makes a big statement.”

“He looked good from top to bottom,” Thomas added.

“Even in the beginning, he looked smooth on his feet. It sounded like he hit a watermelon with a baseball bat, it was a nasty sound to be sitting next to the octagon.”

Battle took the opportunity to call out Bryan Barberena and Ian Garry post-fight, even mistakenly taking aim at the former for spelling his name ‘Brian’.

“I’m not saying this man’s ducking me, but at the least, he’s being protected,” Battle said of Garry.

“I want you. I want all the clout. Neither one of us ranked, nothing is holding us back.”

Barberena was quick to respond on Twitter, taking a cheeky shot at Battle for the name mix-up.

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Categories
Australia

Osborne Park: Crowd spotted dumpster diving for shoes at Betts

Forget dumpster diving for food — the lure of free shoes had these thrifty sandgropers raiding a skip bin outside the head office of a popular shoe retailer.

A crowd of people were spotted outside Betts’ headquarters in Osborne Park on Saturday afternoon after word spread of two big bins full of shoes.

“I’m sure it’s already been shared on the Perth feral community pages … but hurry on down to (Betts’) head office in Osborne Park and help raid the two giant skip bins full of shoes,” a social media user posted on Facebook.

“Or if that’s too much work check out any of the markets or some IGAs around Perth tomorrow.”

Betts Group chief executive Todd Wilner was on his way to the office with another senior executive to clean up the mess on Sunday when he told The West Australian the shoes were samples, some of them with holes drilled into them, and none were in pairs.

Mr Wilner said the company was very conscious about waste and had reached out to charities in the past but were told the shoes were not wanted unless they were in pairs.

Forget dumpster diving for food — the lure of free shoes had these thrifty sandgropers raiding a skip bin outside the head office of a popular shoe retailer.
Camera IconForget dumpster diving for food — the lure of free shoes had these thrifty sandgropers raiding a skip bin outside the head office of a popular shoe retailer. Credit: unknown/Supplied

He said if there was a charity who would be interested in using the samples he wanted to hear from them.

“If there is an organization out there who is prepared to work with us and take single shoes, we are absolutely happy to work with them to reduce our waste,” he said.

Dumpster diving — when people rummage through bins to find edible food, usually discarded at shopping centers — has made headlines recently after a City of Fremantle councilor was caught in the act last month.

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Categories
US

GOP targets vulnerable Democrats with tough votes in vote-a-rama

Senate Republicans are targeting vulnerable Democrats on hot-button campaign issues like taxes, gas prices and the border, as their colleagues plow forward with a sprawling economic bill key to President Biden’s legislative agenda.

Republicans are hoping to make Democrats feel pain with a series of tough votes on proposed amendments to the party’s mammoth bill, dubbed the Inflation Reduction Act, as the Senate buckles up for a long night of round the clock votes in what’s known as a vote- a-branch

Among the amendments Republicans will bring up during the vote-a-rama include measures they say are aimed at gas prices by striking imported and domestic oil tax proposals, reducing gas prices with onshore domestic energy production, and preventing IRS audits from targeting small business owners .

GOP leaders have been hopeful about the chances of securing last-minute changes to the plan, despite their overwhelming opposition to the package, in the event it could make the legislation tougher to pass in the House. However, there is doubt among Republicans about whether any will be able to stick to the bill.

Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) told The Hill that when a party is using the special budget rules the Democrats are employing to avoid a filibuster, “the other side’s going to, you know, end up doing amendments that generally get wiped clean anyway .” He said amendments usually wind up getting used “for political purposes.”

Other amendments Republicans are expected to bring up during the marathon voting session includes one being offered by Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) dealing with Title 42, a Trump-era policy that allows for migrants to be quickly expelled at the border.

The vote could be a tough one for some vulnerable Democrats ahead of the coming midterm races in November.

Earlier this year, the Biden administration drew pushback from Republicans, as well as resistance from some Democrats, over plans to rescind the policy. The effort hit a roadblock in May after a federal judge temporarily stopped the administration from ending the policy, but Lankford has also helped lead a bipartisan push that would limit the White House’s authority on the matter.

Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) called the voting session, which can run through the night and well into the morning, a “rare” chance for voters to see where members stand on critical issues.

“Sometimes you don’t get a vote on some of these things, so it’s good to bring them out,” Tuberville told The Hill, while adding he also has several proposals queued up for consideration.

“I got a couple on taxes, couple on border, if we get to them,” Tuberville said. “We got a lot of them. So, we’ll see. We might be there this time tomorrow night.”

Alex Bolton contributed.

Categories
Entertainment

Teresa Giudice’s hair is both mocked and celebrated by social media users after she ties the knot

Numerous Twitter users voiced their opinions about how Teresa Giudice’s hair was styled during her wedding ceremony, which took place in East Brunswick, New Jersey on Saturday.

The 50-year-old reality television personality’s locks were notably styled into a large bun that sat on top of her head and was held in place by a crown.

The Real Housewives of New Jersey cast member was widely mocked for her hairstyle, which earned her comparisons to science-fiction characters and fellow figures from television, though several users also shared their admiration for the difficult-to-style look.

Voicing their opinions: Numerous Twitter users voiced their opinions about how Teresa Giudice's hair was styled during her wedding ceremony, which took place in East Brunswick, New Jersey on Saturday

Voicing their opinions: Numerous Twitter users voiced their opinions about how Teresa Giudice’s hair was styled during her wedding ceremony, which took place in East Brunswick, New Jersey on Saturday

Several users commented about the sheer volume of Giudice’s hair during the wedding.

One individual noted that she wanted to figure out ‘the exact weight of [her] wedding hair.’

One user expressed that the reality television personality wrote may have asked her hairstylist to give her ‘the Snooki special,’ and another noted that the Jersey Shore cast member’s ‘hair went out of style in 2009.’

An Instagram user reposted a shot that stated that ‘unconfirmed reports say Joey and Melissa [Gorga] have snuck into Teresa’s wedding in her hair.’

Making estimates: One individual noted that she wanted to figure out 'the exact weight of [her] wedding hair'

Making estimates: One individual noted that she wanted to figure out ‘the exact weight of [her] wedding hair’

Not the first time: One user expressed that the reality television personality wrote may have asked her hairstylist to give her 'the Snooki special,' and another noted that the Jersey Shore cast member's 'hair went out of style in 2009'

Not the first time: One user expressed that the reality television personality wrote may have asked her hairstylist to give her ‘the Snooki special,’ and another noted that the Jersey Shore cast member’s ‘hair went out of style in 2009’

Hitching a ride: An Instagram user reposted a shot that stated that 'unconfirmed reports say Joey and Melissa [Gorga] have snuck into Teresa's wedding in her hair'

Hitching a ride: An Instagram user reposted a shot that stated that ‘unconfirmed reports say Joey and Melissa [Gorga] have snuck into Teresa’s wedding in her hair’

Several others made their disdain for the Giudice’s hairstyle blatantly apparent.

One of the many users wrote that her ‘hair was a disaster even for a wedding in New Jersey!’

Another noted that her ‘wedding hair looks exactly like Gwen Shamblin’s but worse.’

The reality television personality’s detractors often spoke about the sheer boldness of her look, with one describing it as ‘CAMP.’

Harsh critics: One of the many users wrote that her 'hair was a disaster even for a wedding in New Jersey'

Harsh critics: One of the many users wrote that her ‘hair was a disaster even for a wedding in New Jersey’

Not mincing words: Another noted that her 'wedding hair looks exactly like Gwen Shamblin's but worse'

Not mincing words: Another noted that her ‘wedding hair looks exactly like Gwen Shamblin’s but worse’

Giving it a name: The reality television personality's detractors often spoke about the sheer boldness of her look, with one describing it as 'CAMP'

Giving it a name: The reality television personality’s detractors often spoke about the sheer boldness of her look, with one describing it as ‘CAMP’

However, several others spoke positively of Giudice’s choice of hairstyle for the evening.

One user expressed her support by writing: ‘The higher your hair, the closer you are to heaven. This is the old school Teresa I fell in love with! Queen of New Jersey!’

Another expressed her enthusiasm about the occasion with: ‘Sis said if you gonna do it do it big!’

One individual summed up many of the comments by writing: ‘Teresa looks so happy. That’s all that matters.’

Supportive: One user expressed her support by writing: 'The higher your hair, the closer you are to heaven.  This is the old school Teresa I fell in love with!  Queen of New Jersey'

Supportive: One user expressed her support by writing: ‘The higher your hair, the closer you are to heaven. This is the old school Teresa I fell in love with! Queen of New Jersey’

Big fan: Another expressed her enthusiasm about the occasion with: 'Sis said if you gonna do it do it big'

Big fan: Another expressed her enthusiasm about the occasion with: ‘Sis said if you gonna do it do it big’

Priorities: One individual summed up many of the comments by writing: 'Teresa looks so happy.  That's all that matters'

Priorities: One individual summed up many of the comments by writing: ‘Teresa looks so happy. That’s all that matters’

Giudice was first revealed as having begun seeing Ruelas, 47, in July of 2020.

The reality television personality was previously married to her former husband, Joe, from 1999 until 2020.

The former couple shared four daughters named Gia, Gabriella, Milania and Audriana, aged 21, 16, 17 and 12.

The influencer went on to begin seeing Ruelas, and the former couple announced that they were engaged last October.

In the past: Giudice was first revealed as having begun seeing Ruelas, 47, in July of 2020

In the past: Giudice was first revealed as having begun seeing Ruelas, 47, in July of 2020

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Categories
Sports

AFL live ScoreCentre: North Melbourne vs Sydney, Brisbane vs Carlton, West Coast vs Adelaide live scores, stats and results

Brisbane welcome Carlton to the Gabba as both sides fight to keep their September aspirations on track.

Meanwhile West Coast fans will farewell champion key forward Josh Kennedy in his final AFL game against Adelaide.

Earlier, a big Sydney win over North Melbourne saw the Swans jump up to third on the AFL ladder.

Follow the live scores, stats and results below.

Brisbane v Carlton

Team stats

Player stats

West Coast v Adelaide

Team stats

Player stats

Swans back into top four with big win over North

The Sydney Swans have enhanced their AFL top-four prospects with a comfortable 38-point victory over lowly North Melbourne at Docklands Stadium.

The Swans predictably dominated Sunday’s contest but North, led by a career-high eight-goal haul from Nick Larkey, kicked accurately to prevent the visitors from streaking ahead in the first-half.

Lance Franklin puts his arm around Chad Warner
Lance Franklin and Chad Warner were both among the goals against North Melbourne.(Getty Images: Michael Willson)

Sydney put their foot down in the third quarter, however, kicking six goals to three before cruising to their fifth-straight victory, 18.18 (126) to 13.10 (88).

The result leaves the Swans (14-6) fourth on the ladder, just below reigning premiers Melbourne on percentage, leading into their last home-and-away games against Collingwood and St Kilda.

Sydney were too powerful across every area of ​​the ground, with young guns Chad Warner, Errol Gulden and Nick Blakey leading the charge.

But veterans like Tom Hickey, Sam Reid and dynamic forward-midfielder Tom Papley were also influential.

Superstar Lance Franklin, who on Saturday declared he was putting contract talks with the club on hold until the end of the season, ended with four goals after North defender Aidan Corr restricted the legendary goal-kicker early in the game.

North (2-18) suffered a pre-game blow when key defender Ben McKay (shoulder) was withdrawn and replaced by Josh Walker, who had been preparing to play in the Kangaroos’ VFL game at Arden St.

Larkey was clearly the Kangaroos’ best, while midfielder Luke Davies-Uniacke put in another outstanding performance in his career-best season.

While all ran smoothly for the Swans at Docklands, former co-captain Josh Kennedy suffered a suspected hamstring injury in the VFL game after he was on the cusp of a return to the AFL side.

The Swans are back at the SCG next Sunday for a mammoth clash with the red-hot Magpies in a crucial battle to make-up the top-four, while the Kangaroos travel to play Adelaide on Saturday to face the Crows.

ladder

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Categories
Australia

Does reinfection make you sicker? Examining the research

“Reinfection is common and increases your risk of bad outcomes,” Professor Raina MacIntyre, head of the Kirby Institute’s biosecurity program, wrote in the Saturday Paper.

“Being infected with Omicron BA.1 earlier in 2022 does not give you much protection against the newer variants.”

But others remain skeptical about the studies’ results.

Does infection with Omicron offer protection against future infection?

In June, a UK-based research team caused a stir with its surprise finding, published in the journal Sciencethat getting infected with Omicron seemed to provide little protection against reinfection with Omicron.

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This might be a case of “immune imprinting”, the researchers suggested: the immune system remembering the first version of the virus it saw and building antibodies to that older version each time it encountered a new variant.

But science is accumulative: many studies over time build an accurate picture of what’s going on.

the Science paper studied antibodies in a test tube; data from the real-world is more optimistic.

A paper from Qatar suggests Omicron infections are close to 80 per cent effective at preventing infection with Omicron subvariants BA.4 and BA.5. Studies from Denmark and Portugal come to similar conclusions.

Does each reinfection increase the risk of bad outcomes?

Also in June, a team led by Washington University’s Ziyad Al-Aly uploaded its paper based on a large healthcare database operated by the US Department of Veterans Affairs, which covers US military veterans. They extracted healthcare data for people who had been infected and reinfected, and compared that with veterans who had never been infected.

Compared with those who had been infected once, veterans who had been reinfected were three times more likely to be hospitalized and twice as likely to be dead. They were more than twice as likely to have heart or blood problems, fatigue or mental health issues. As people had more reinfections, their health problems increased.

Professor Rhonda Stuart at the vaccination hub at Monash Medical Centre.

Professor Rhonda Stuart at the vaccination hub at Monash Medical Centre.

Based on this paper, we should be doing all we can to avoid reinfection, said Professor Rhonda Stuart, director of epidemiology at Monash Health.

“If you have a chance of getting long COVID from your first infection, it would seem to make sense that you have the same chance the next time you get COVID,” she said.

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“In the end, the message is, if you’ve had COVID, you don’t want to get it again.”

If reinfection is worse than primary infection, this would be an unusual feature of the virus. In many other respiratory viruses, “reinfection typically results in a milder illness with a shorter duration”, said Dr Gemma Saravanos, a respiratory infection researcher at the University of Sydney.

The paper has not yet been peer reviewed or published in a scientific journal – meaning it needs to be interpreted with caution.

Other scientists identified possible biases in the paper that may cloud the results.

The study used healthcare records, meaning people had to be sick enough to use healthcare. That means it might have missed people who had asymptomatic reinfections, or cases so mild they did not get tested. By oversampling people who got very sick after reinfection, the study could make the effect of reinfection seem worse. “I think there are fair concerns about sampling bias,” said Assistant Professor Saskia Popescu from the US-based George Mason University’s biodefence program. “Especially in this case, as they used a population … which may be more likely to have existing health challenges and co-morbidities.”

The study also compared people infected with the original strain of the coronavirus and those reinfected with the Delta variant – which is known to be more severe.

Professor Tony Blakely.

Professor Tony Blakely.Credit: Supplied

Based on that, “I would confidently predict that the risk of serious symptoms on a reinfection – compared with first infection, and for hypothetically same virus – is less,” said University of Melbourne epidemiologist Professor Tony Blakely. “But time will tell.”

Other studies come to different conclusions than the June papers. A study published in the Journal of Infection in April, looking at 13,960 reinfections in Britain, found people were 61 per cent less likely to die from a reinfection compared with an initial infection. Rates of hospitalization were also dramatically lower. Similar data has been published from Serbia and Qatar.

For Efron, having experienced none of the effects of long COVID, it was the reassurance of knowing what lay ahead that made the second infection easier than the first.

“I just remember the first time feeling tightness of breathing and found that alarming and a bit uncomfortable. So I think the second time actually was a little bit better.”

Liam Mannix’s Examine newsletter explains and analyzes science with a rigorous focus on the evidence. Sign up to get it each week.

Categories
US

Sanders Knocks Schumer and Manchin on ‘so-Called Inflation Reduction Act’

  • Bernie Sanders blasted Democrats’ major climate and healthcare bill as “the so-called Inflation Reduction Act.”
  • Sanders pointed out a nonpartisan review found the legislation wouldn’t have an immediate effect on inflation.
  • Republicans have also knocked out the bill’s name.

Sen. Bernie Sanders blasted Democrats’ massive climate and healthcare bill on Saturday evening as senators tried to pass a major piece of Biden’s economic agenda after more than a year of debate.

“I want to take a moment to say a few words about the so-called Inflation Reduction Act that we are debating this evening,” Sanders said just after joining Democrats in advancing debate on the proposal. “I say so-called because according to the CBO and other economic organizations that have studied this bill, it will in fact have a minimal impact on inflation.”

For much of the week, Sanders has turned into the $740 billion proposal brokered by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Joe Manchin, which would invest millions in green energy, lower some prescription drug prices, and impose a 15 percent minimum tax on large corporations.

Sanders’ mention of the CBO, or Congressional Budget Office, is a nod to the nonpartisan scorekeeper’s finding that the proposal is negligible, at least in the immediate future, NPR previously reported.

The Vermont independent intends to introduce amendments to change the bill, such as one measure that would empower Medicare to pay an amount equal to the Department of Veterans Affairs for prescription drugs. Sanders later stood alone as both Democrats and Republicans rejected his amendment to cap costs for covered prescription drugs under Medicare parts B and D by a 99 to 1 vote.

Both Georgia Democrats, Sens. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, later joined Sanders on an amendment that would Medicare to cover dental, vision, and hearing benefits. But once again, the Vermont senator’s effort failed via a lopsided vote, this time 3 to 97.

Republicans have used the CBO’s findings as fodder to lambaste the Democrats’ proposal. Some have previously used Sanders’ exact approach of referring to the proposal as “the so-called Inflation Reduction Act.”

“I don’t find myself saying this very often. But on that point, I agree with Bernie,” Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, the second-ranked Senate Republican, told Insider.

Sanders has smoked over the elements that were jettisoned from Biden’s larger “Build Back Better” agenda to advance the compromise, including universal pre-K, tuition-free community college, and in-home care for the elderly.

The Vermont senator and former presidential candidate added that the legislation contains “good features” but also criticized its inclusion of a drug pricing provision that will take years to kick in. He later called it an “incredibly tepid bill.” Sanders also ripped the provisions in the bill that would expand some fossil fuel exploration, an addition that helped secure Manchin’s support.

Sanders pressed Democratic senators to address “the major crises facing working families” during his floor speech.

“If we cannot do that, not only will people continue to hurt and suffer but to my mind, it is questionable how long we will remain a democracy,” he said on Saturday.

Sen. Ron Wyden, who helped write the legislation as chairman of the powerful Finance committee, said he shared Sanders’ hope for a bill that went further in many areas. But on drug pricing, in particular, Wyden argued the bill still takes major steps.

“I’ve said I’d like to do more myself, more quickly — there’s no question about that those are my roots,” Wyden told reporters, adding that when faced “between inaction and this, for me it’s not a close call. “

Categories
Entertainment

Willow Smith defends dad Will Smith’s Oscars slapgate scandal after Chris Rock hit

Willow Smith has defended her dad’s infamous Oscars slap.

The 21-year-old said it is part of “humanness” to make errors after the 53-year-old actor stormed the stage of this year’s Academy Awards to whack stand-up comic Chris Rock, 57, for making a joke about his wife’s haircut.

Singer Willow told Billboard in an interview published Friday: “I see my whole family as being human, and I love and accept them for all their humanness.

“Because of the position that we’re in, our humanness sometimes isn’t accepted, and we’re expected to act in a way that isn’t conducive to a healthy human life and isn’t conducive to being honest.”

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