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Sports

Premier League results, scores, live coverage, Liverpool vs Fulham, Darwin Nunez goal, Mo Salah, video

Liverpool twice had to come from behind against newly-promoted Fulham to salvage a 2-2 draw in a pulsating start to the Premier League season on Saturday.

Aleksandar Mitrovic twice put the impressive hosts ahead, but Darwin Nunez came off the bench to make a huge impact on his Premier League debut.

The Uruguayan, who arrived at Anfield in a deal that could rise to 100 million euros ($A147 million) from Benfica, flicked home to level at 1-1 and then teed up Mohamed Salah for an equalizer 10 minutes from time.

BOLD PREDICTIONS: City go back-to-back, United flop and who gets relegated?

Darwin Nunez (L) gets in front of Fulham's defender Tosin Adarabioyo to shoot and score their first goal.  (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP)
Darwin Nunez (L) gets in front of Fulham’s defender Tosin Adarabioyo to shoot and score their first goal. (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP)Source: AFP

Liverpool’s season had got off to a flying start by getting the better of Manchester City to win the Community Shield in what was billed as an early showdown between the two title contenders.

However, the Reds were punished for a sluggish performance in the first hour in what could provide a costly concession of two points.

Mitrovic scored 43 goals in as many games last season as Fulham broke to the Championship title and gave Liverpool an early warning as he stabbed just wide inside the first minute.

Much to Jurgen Klopp’s frustration on the touchline, the visitors did not wake from their slumber and were finally punished on 32 minutes when Mitrovic outmuscled Trent Alexander-Arnold at the back post to head in Kenny Tete’s cross.

Liverpool flickered into life before the break as Luis Diaz smashed against the post from a narrow angle.

However, it was not until the introduction of the towering presence of Nunez that the Champions League finalists began to pose a persistent threat.

Nunez was at fault when Fulham were inches away from doubling their lead when he was caught in possession and the ball was fed to Neeskens Kebano, who drilled off the inside of the post.

Aleksandar Mitrovic scores Fulham’s second goal. (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP)Source: AFP

At the other end, Liverpool’s new striker quickly made his presence felt as an audacious flick from Salah’s cross was saved by Marek Rodak.

Moments later a replica move did deliver Nunez’s first Premier League goal as he backheeled in from Salah’s low cross 26 minutes from time.

At that point there appeared only one winner, but Mitrovic showed a surprising fleetness of foot to turn Virgil van Dijk, who clipped the Serbian striker inside the box.

Mitrovic coolly slotted the resulting penalty low past Alisson Becker, but Fulham failed to hold out in the final 18 minutes for a famous win.

Another long ball into the box towards Nunez caused panic in the Fulham defense and the ball eventually fell kindly to Salah to score on the opening weekend of the Premier League for a sixth consecutive season.

Liverpool could even have snatched victory five minutes into stoppage time when Jordan Henderson’s long range strike came back off the crossbar.

But a point was the least Fulham served as they made a strong start in their bid to avoid relegation for a fourth consecutive season when in the top flight.

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Categories
US

Uber prices surged wildly after SF’s Outside Lands festival

It is a tale as old as time — a music festival ends, and people need to get home. Unfortunately, that few mile trip back to your apartment almost always ends up being a nightmare.

To try to soften the travel apocalypse, Outside Lands runs extra MUNI service throughout the festival, with added buses along the 5R Fulton bus on the north of Golden Gate Park, and more service along the N-Judah light rail line on south of the park . However, despite these additional reinforcements, other bus routes like the 38 Geary were swamped shortly after the festival let out.

Biking is the easiest way to get to and from the festival, and Outside Lands offers extensive bike parking near the entrances.

The ridehailing pickup point north of Golden Gate Park during Outside Lands.

The ridehailing pickup point north of Golden Gate Park during Outside Lands.

Dan Gentile

If you dared to use a ride-hailing company after the festival, dedicated pickup zones a few blocks off of Fulton and Judah tried to lessen the logistical burden, but even so, you likely experienced some serious sticker shock.

Up until around 9 pm, prices remained fairly reasonable by 2022 standards, with a short trip to the Lower Haight costing around $20, and a trip to Oakland costing $45.

However as dueling headliners SZA, Phoebe Bridgers and Disclosure began letting out at 10 pm, prices surged wildly, with that same 4-mile Lower Haight trip costing $62, and that Oakland ride clocking in at $140. A ride to North Beach neared $80. and the cost of trips to further-flung San Francisco neighborhoods like Mission Bay or Glen Park almost hit triple digits, topping $90.

A screenshot of ridehailing prices during the first night of Outside Lands.

A screenshot of ridehailing prices during the first night of Outside Lands.


Dan Gentile

A screenshot of ridehailing prices during the first night of Outside Lands.

A screenshot of ridehailing prices during the first night of Outside Lands.


Dan Gentile

Ride-hailing prices arose after Outside Lands. Credit: Dan Gentile

So if you’re planning on hailing a ride the next few nights, it unfortunately might be best to skip out on that headliner’s encore.

MORE OUTSIDE LANDS COVERAGE:

— Everything you need to know before you go to SF’s Outside Lands

— The best photos from Day One of Outside Lands

— What it’s like to be the only Bay Area rapper playing Outside Lands

— The best bands to see at San Francisco’s Outside Lands music festival

Categories
Technology

BlenderBot 3: An AI Chatbot That Improves Through Conversation

To build artificial intelligence (AI) systems that can interact with people in smarter, safer and more useful ways, we need to teach them to adapt to our needs. Today, we’re releasing Blender Bot 3, our state-of-the-art conversational agent that can converse naturally with people, who can then provide feedback to the model on how to improve its responses. We will be sharing data from these interactions, and we’ve shared the BlenderBot 3 model and model cards with the scientific community to help advance research in conversational AI.

The BlenderBot series has made progress in combining conversational skills — like personality, empathy and knowledge — incorporating long-term memory, and searching the internet to carry out meaningful conversations. BlenderBot 3 inherits these skills and delivers superior performance because it’s built from Meta AI’s publicly available OPT-175B language model — approximately 58 times the size of BlenderBot 2.

Since all conversational AI chatbots are known to sometimes mimic and generate unsafe, biased or offensive remarks, we’ve conducted large-scale studies, co-organized workshops and developed new techniques to create safeguards for BlenderBot 3. Despite this work, BlenderBot can still make rude or offensive comments, which is why we are collecting feedback that will help make future chatbots better.

The Promise and Challenge of Chatting With Humans

Allowing an AI system to interact with people in the real world leads to longer, more diverse conversations, as well as more varied feedback. For example, you can react to each chat message in our BlenderBot 3 demo by clicking either the thumbs-up or thumbs-down icons. Choosing a thumbs-down lets you explain why you disliked the message — whether it was off-topic, nonsensical, rude, spam-like or something else. You can also submit feedback in the chat itself.

A screenshot showing a conversation with BlenderBot 3.

Developing a Safe Chatbot That Improves Itself

To improve BlenderBot 3’s ability to engage with people, we trained it with a large amount of publicly available language data. Many of the datasets used were collected by our own team, including one new dataset consisting of more than 20,000 conversations with people predicated on more than 1,000 topics of conversation. We trained BlenderBot 3 to learn from conversations to improve upon the skills people find most important — from talking about healthy recipes to finding child-friendly amenities in the city.

When the chatbot’s response is unsatisfactory, we collect feedback on it. Using this data, we can improve the model so that it doesn’t repeat its mistakes.

We understand that not everyone who uses chatbots has good intentions, so we also developed new learning algorithms to distinguish between helpful responses and harmful examples. Over time, we will use this technique to make our models more responsible and safe for all users.

Putting BlenderBot 3 to the Test

Compared with its predecessors, we found that BlenderBot 3 improved by 31% on conversational tasks. It’s also twice as knowledgeable, while being factually incorrect 47% less often. We also found that only 0.16% of BlenderBot’s responses to people were flagged as rude or inappropriate.

The goal of our research is to collect and release feedback data that we and the broader AI research community can leverage over time. That way, we can find new ways for AI systems to be safer and more engaging for people who use them.

Driving Conversational AI Forward

Progress in the field of AI heavily depends on the opportunity for the wider AI research community to build on the best available technology. Therefore, releasing chatbot models and datasets is key to gaining complete, reliable insights into how and why they work, the potential they hold and their limitations.

While BlenderBot 3 significantly advances publicly available chatbots, it’s certainly not at a human level. It’s occasionally incorrect, inconsistent and off-topic. As more people interact with our demo, we’ll improve our models using their feedback and release data to benefit the wider AI community.

Learn more about BlenderBot 3

Categories
Sports

“It Was Not Easy…”: Zhou Makes Shocking Alpine F1 Confession Amidst Ugly Oscar Piastri Dispute

Oscar Piastri, making his imminent move to the big leagues, is the talk of the town. There has been no official confirmation yet, but multiple reports suggest Piastri will drive for McLaren next season. The rookie Australian will probably replace the outgoing one in the most extraordinary turn of events.

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Alpine, without a valid contract, announced Piastri as their driver for the 2023 season. The young Australian quickly and publicly refuted the French team’s claim on his social media. Watching the saga unfold from a distance is Piastri’s former Alpine academy driver, Zhou Guanyu.

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The Chinese driver recently shared his delight over his decision to leave Alpine for a seat at Alfa Romeo last year. he said, “I’ve been completely released. 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.”

“So 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,” further added the content Alfa Romeo man.

Formula One F1 – Austrian Grand Prix – Red Bull Ring, Spielberg, Austria – July 7, 2022 Alfa Romeo’s Guanyu Zhou ahead of the Grand Prix REUTERS/Florion Goga

Until it was announced, Piastri did not have a seat in the French paddock with Alonso set to continue. However, Piastri is finally walking in his colleague’s steps a season later.

Piastri will most probably have a seat in F1 in 2023. But where? And that is a question that affects Daniel Ricciardo as well.

If Oscar Piastri drives for McLaren, where will Ricciardo go?

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As it is becoming increasingly evident that Oscar Piastri will drive for McLaren, the team has to get their house in order. And the first order of business would be to take care of the Daniel Ricciardo situation.

Formula One F1 – Azerbaijan Grand Prix – Baku City Circuit, Baku, Azerbaijan – June 12, 2022 McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo ahead of the Azerbaijan Grand Prix REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed

Since the Australian is contracted until the 2023 season, McLaren might have to work on a pay-off deal with Ricciardo to terminate his contract a year early. This deal highly depends on the driver securing a seat elsewhere. However, according to reports, Ricciardo has had four teams contact him in the past two weeks alone.

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Watch This Story: Struggling ‘Honey Badger’ Daniel Ricciardo Once Dominated the Streets of Azerbaijan in Glorious 2017

Coming weeks will reveal some of the changes in the 2023 grid as the world waits eagerly.

Categories
US

US judge rules in favor of pharmacist who denied woman morning-after pill | usnews

A Minnesota jury has ruled that a pharmacy did not discriminate against a woman when it was denied to give her the morning-after pill.

The pharmacist gave “belief” as the reason for refusing to fill the prescription for emergency contraception. Although the jury decided that the woman’s rights had not been violated, it did say that the emotional damage caused by the decision amounted to $25,000.

Gender Justice, a nonprofit legal advocacy, filed the lawsuit on behalf of Andrea Anderson in 2019, although the case did not reach trial until Monday.

Anderson was denied morning-after contraceptive bills by numerous pharmacies, and said she would have to travel 100 miles total to get a pill.

In a statement released by Gender Justice, she expressed concern about the preceding jury’s decision sets and the message it gives to other women seeking emergency contraception.

“What if they accept the pharmacist’s decision and don’t realize that this behavior is wrong? What if they have no other choice? Anderson said. “Not everyone has the means or ability to drive hundreds of thousands to get a prescription filled.”

“Unfortunately, highly personal healthcare decisions such as whether to get pregnant and grow your family are heavily politicized,” said Jess Braverman, legal director at Gender Justice. “It is illegal sex discrimination in the state of Minnesota for a pharmacist to refuse to dispense emergency contraception without, at the very least, ensuring a patient can get their prescription without extra delay and cost to them.”

The verdict comes on the heels of a June decision by the supreme court to overturn the constitutional right to an abortion initially protected in the case of Roe v Wade.

Minnesota still allows abortions legally after the overturning of Roe, and permanently blocked “numerous medically unnecessary restrictions” in July.

Friday’s jury decision coincided with Indiana imposing a near-total ban on abortion, the first state to do so following the overturning of Roe.

Following the passing of that law, the pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly said it will be “forced to plan for more employment growth outside our home state”.

“We are concerned that this law will hinder Lilly’s – and Indiana’s – ability to attract diverse scientific, engineering and business talent from around the world,” it said.

Some traditionally conservative states such as West Virginia and South Carolina continue to debate remain in a limbo in terms of coming to a conclusion about their decision on abortions.

Last week, in the nation’s first referendum on abortion since the supreme court decision, voters in Kansas rejected a change to their state constitution protecting abortion rights.

The surprise victory was celebrated as a testament to the desire for abortion rights nationwide, even in Republican-leaning states.

Categories
Technology

Google Search just got a handy upgrade for finding things fast — and you can try it now

Google has many tricks and shortcuts that help narrow down exactly what you are looking for — and it just rolled out a new search feature that should speed things up even more. When you use quotes in a search, that particular word or phrase will show up in a snippet in bold under the webpage — and not just that: Google will indicate where exactly that word/phrase will appear on the site.

The new update from Google should save you precious minutes that are spent in scrolling through websites, finding the exact term you are looking for. Google already had “search with quotes” in place, which brought up only those pages that contained those particular words.

Now in a blog post (opens in new tab), Google mentions that it is updating its search shortcut to help users find content much faster. Google “generally” makes the quoted words bold in the webpage snippets when searched for on a desktop, but not when accessed through a phone.

Image of a screenshot of Google's new search with quotes update

Google illustrates the search results for “google search” (Image credit: Google)

In Google’s example, the term “google search” is highlighted in bold below each webpage that it is found. The sentence that is under the webpage is a snippet that Google has created to help users find the term, rather than a description or context of the webpage.

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Entertainment

Nope’s Keke Palmer: ‘Being a child star is really exploitative’ | movies

Keke Palmer was at home in New York, “hanging out on the couch, or whatever,” when she got the call. Jordan Peele, her management said, wanted a chat. Top-secret, obviously. “And I’m like, are y’all serious? He wants to talk to me about his new film by him? She sounds incredulous, having worked with Peele only once before in 2013, on his sketch show with comedy collaborator Keegan-Michael Key (“Girl, it was the smallest little thing”).

The call led to a digital copy of a script, programmed to auto-delete if you screenshot it. And that became 28-year-old Palmer’s starring role in Nope, Peele’s grab at summer blockbuster status. The sci-fi horror follows his Oscar-winning directorial debut Get Out, and 2019’s Us. And in it, Palmer’s Emerald Haywood and her ella older brother OJ (Daniel Kaluuya) resolve to make history. Somewhere out there, in a white-hot sky above their family’s dusty horse ranch, they are pretty sure they can see a UFO. Their goal? Capturing it on film. The story is about spectacle, but it’s also about the sweaty-palmed hustle culture Hollywood attracts – and siblings who know precisely how to both support and annoy each other.

Palmer’s not new to this. She has been in everything from tween sitcoms to the critically acclaimed Hustlers. She has even voiced a lovebug in Netflix’s filthy animated comedy Big Mouth and its spin-off Human Resources. Emerald Haywood is, though, her highest billing of her on a feature film as an adult. How does she react to Nope being described as her big break from her?

“It’s pretty normal, I think, especially as a Black entertainer,” she says. It reminds her of an old interview she saw, maybe with Luther Vandross. She remembers he was asked – and she puts on a newsreader voice – “How does it feel to be mainstream?” To which she believes he replied: “Well, I’ve always been mainstream; you’ve just found out.”

Nope seems molded for Palmer. As a former child star, she has something in common with Ricky “Jupe” Park, the character played in the film by Steven Yeun. “I really related to it,” she says. “I think performing in general is exploitative. I think that being a child entertainer is really exploitative, because you don’t even know your limits yourself,” she says, on a sofa in an empty central London hotel room. “And a lot of what you later envision as a memory is actually trauma.”

She says this looking perfectly calm. As the air-con gusts, Palmer huddles under a pristine white bathrobe which was draped across her by one of her her handlers as we started to speak. Palmer pulls the robe up to her chin from her. Anyone charmed by a widely shared Vanity Fair interview snippet, where she politely and hilariously explained that she couldn’t identify ex-US vice-president Dick Cheney – “sorry to this man” – would see a quieter side to her today.

Clips of her filmed interviews often become memes. “I’ve had people discover me from the ‘sorry to this man’ meme,” rather than acting roles, she says. She doesn’t mind. Leaning forward, she will take in a question, sometimes playing with the ends of her long cornrows under the robe, a powered-down Energiser bunny version of the viral Keke Palmer.

(Lr) Daniel Kaluuya, Keke Palmer and Brandon Perea in Nope, written, produced, and directed by Jordan Peele.
(Lr) Daniel Kaluuya, Keke Palmer and Brandon Perea in Nope, written, produced, and directed by Jordan Peele. Photograph: Universal Pictures

Born in Harvey, Illinois, then raised in nearby Robbins, Palmer was encouraged to perform by her parents. Singing, acting – it didn’t matter. Aged nine, she starred in Barbershop 2: Back in Business, as the niece of Queen Latifah’s Gina. At 10, she was nominated for a Screen Actors Guild award, opposite William H Macy in The Wool Cap (she lost to Glenn Close). Her milestones of her kept coming: NAACP Image award-winner for Akeelah and the Bee in 2007, and for Nickelodeon sitcom True Jackson, VP; talkshow host of Just Keke on BET, aged 20; the first Black Cinderella on Broadway in 2014.

As a Nickelodeon and Disney actor, she learned to hit her marks, something Peele includes in Nope. “I liked how Jordan put that story in there,” she says, grinning. “There’s so many themes about the film industry, how degenerative it is, and the people that chews it up and spits out.”

Her character, Emerald, seems more than happy to be a jack of all trades in entertainment, reeling off her skills to the crew on a horse wrangling job, while OJ looks on, like a man-sized eye roll. Both siblings (but really OJ) have taken over their father’s horse-wrangling business, after he died under mysterious circumstances. OJ, a sullen foil to sparky Emerald, thinks footage of the UFO could change their fortunes.

Emerald and OJ are the fictional descendants of the real, unknown Black jockey in Eadweard Muybridge’s pioneering 19th-century picture sequences depicting bodies in motion. “You have a character like Emerald, who’s trying to keep the legacy of her family de ella alive,” Palmer says. “And then you have someone like me, who’s playing her from her. There’s something very meta about it” – as though Palmer is the successful real-life version of who Emerald strives to be.

Lili Reinhart, Jennifer Lopez, Keke Palmer and Constance Wu in Hustlers.
Lili Reinhart, Jennifer Lopez, Keke Palmer and Constance Wu in Hustlers. Photograph: Barbara Nitke/Stxfilms/Allstar

Beyond that, Palmer – like Emerald – knows about navigating the entertainment business as a Black woman. Race and racism aren’t the central subject in Nope, as they were in Get Out. Still, Peele puts Black characters at the center of his films in a way that can trip up people when they expect racism itself to be the point. “This is just his perspective of him,” Palmer says. “Yes, there are nuances in there that can speak to the Black experience specifically, but it’s life, life stories.”

What does she make of playing a Black character whose Blackness is almost taken for granted? “I think it’s great. I mean, I don’t think that Steven Spielberg casts white people because he doesn’t like Black people. I think it’s from his perspective of him.” If she were to write a script, she reckons she would “end up writing about a Black woman” just the same. “It’s just what I can relate to.”

I meet Palmer days after she answered to a tweet thread implying she’s less successful than mixed-race Euphoria lead actor Zendaya because Palmer is darker-skinned. Both were Disney stars. How does she process moments like that? “Yeah… oof.” A very long pause. “It’s difficult. I’m asked about it a lot, do you know? Before that little tweet even came out.” She tries again. “People would always ask me: ‘How do you deal with colorism? How do you deal with being Black in this industry?’ And the answer I’m gonna give you may not be the answer that you want. Because the truth is, I ignore it. I ignore it.”

For some time, she works through this out loud. Her words from her cascade, then suddenly stop. Ultimately, she is saying that, surely, racism exists. But if she spent all of her time stressing about it, she’d never get anything done. “I just hate when the narrative goes to a place where I think young girls might look and say: ‘I’m a victim.’ When yes, racism is real. Colorism is real.” But an imagined Zendaya v Keke Palmer face-off isn’t real. “You believe I’m not doing enough, not because I’m not but because you don’t believe that I can be enough. And that is colorism.”

What disturbs her more is being turned into an object of pity. “You should actually use me as an example of what I was able to accomplish despite what I was up against. Don’t change the story of somebody who has given hope to make them hopeless,” she says, with a “huh!” chuckle. “The real conversation around colorism and Keke Palmer should be that she defied the odds.”

She wasn’t raised to reason with racists. “If you feel like the Boo-Boo-Jones awards don’t show love to Black people, then stop going,” she begins, sounding exasperated. “Don’t ask somebody to care about your ass if they don’t care about you. Go where you’re celebrated, not where you have to beg to get in.” That’s why, she thinks aloud, she’s not as scarred by prejudice. “It’s not because I’m not experiencing it or haven’t been on the receiving end of it. Of course I have been. But…OK? Then, ‘Fuck you, too,’ and you move the hell on to where people appreciate you. That’s all you can do.” It’s why, she thinks, she’s able to work consistently. And perhaps why the calls keep coming.

Nope is released in the UK on 12 August

Categories
US

US judge rules in favor of pharmacist who denied woman morning-after pill | usnews

A Minnesota jury has ruled that a pharmacy did not discriminate against a woman when it was denied to give her the morning-after pill.

The pharmacist gave “belief” as the reason for refusing to fill the prescription for emergency contraception. Although the jury decided that the woman’s rights had not been violated, it did say that the emotional damage caused by the decision amounted to $25,000.

Gender Justice, a nonprofit legal advocacy, filed the lawsuit on behalf of Andrea Anderson in 2019, although the case did not reach trial until Monday.

Anderson was denied morning-after contraceptive bills by numerous pharmacies, and said she would have to travel 100 miles total to get a pill.

In a statement released by Gender Justice, she expressed concern about the preceding jury’s decision sets and the message it gives to other women seeking emergency contraception.

“What if they accept the pharmacist’s decision and don’t realize that this behavior is wrong? What if they have no other choice? Anderson said. “Not everyone has the means or ability to drive hundreds of thousands to get a prescription filled.”

“Unfortunately, highly personal healthcare decisions such as whether to get pregnant and grow your family are heavily politicized,” said Jess Braverman, legal director at Gender Justice. “It is illegal sex discrimination in the state of Minnesota for a pharmacist to refuse to dispense emergency contraception without, at the very least, ensuring a patient can get their prescription without extra delay and cost to them.”

The verdict comes on the heels of a June decision by the supreme court to overturn the constitutional right to an abortion initially protected in the case of Roe v Wade.

Minnesota still allows abortions legally after the overturning of Roe, and permanently blocked “numerous medically unnecessary restrictions” in July.

Friday’s jury decision coincided with Indiana imposing a near-total ban on abortion, the first state to do so following the overturning of Roe.

Following the passing of that law, the pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly said it will be “forced to plan for more employment growth outside our home state”.

“We are concerned that this law will hinder Lilly’s – and Indiana’s – ability to attract diverse scientific, engineering and business talent from around the world,” it said.

Some traditionally conservative states such as West Virginia and South Carolina continue to debate remain in a limbo in terms of coming to a conclusion about their decision on abortions.

Last week, in the nation’s first referendum on abortion since the supreme court decision, voters in Kansas rejected a change to their state constitution protecting abortion rights.

The surprise victory was celebrated as a testament to the desire for abortion rights nationwide, even in Republican-leaning states.

Categories
Entertainment

Kate Middleton and Prince William’s tender gesture to Princess Charlotte

Kate Middleton and Prince William spotted giving Princess Charlotte a tender but subtle gesture to support her in public.


Kate Middleton and Prince William have been seen giving tender but subtle gestures of reassurance to Princess Charlotte in public.

Categories
US

Democrats plan to challenge parliamentarian on insulin cap

Senate Democrats say they plan to challenge a ruling by the parliamentarian striking a proposal sponsored by Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) to cap insulin prices from the Inflation Reduction Act, according to a Democrat familiar with the plan.

As of now, Warnock’s proposal to cap out-of-pocket insulin costs at $35 a month is in the bill, but the parliamentarian is expected to rule on the Senate floor that it does not comply with the Byrd rule, which prohibits policymaking in budget reconciliation bills that have a tangential impact on spending and revenue.

But Democrats plan to challenge the parliamentarian’s ruling on the floor, which means they would need 60 votes to waive an objection to keeping the insulin provision in the bill.

Any effort to overturn the parliamentarian is not likely to get 10 Republican votes, but it will put Republicans on the record as opposing a $35 monthly cap on patients’ insulin costs, which Democrats can use as political ammo in the midterm elections.

“I think it’s hard for elected officials to go home, as everybody’s headed now, and try to explain, if they choose to vote that way, why they’re not supporting getting relief to millions of Americans who are getting crushed by these insulin bills ,” Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said ahead of the floor showdown.

Maine Sen. Susan Collins (R) said it was “unfortunate” that Democrats were turning the issue into a political football.

Collins has sponsored a bipartisan bill with Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (DN.H.) to lower insulin costs.

Their bill would encourage insulin manufacturers to reduce their list prices and limit out-of-pocket costs for patients with diabetes by ensuring that group and individual market health plans waive deductibles and cost-sharing to no more than $35 a month, according to a summary provided by their offices.

“I think it’s unfortunate that it was included” in the reconciliation package, Collins said of the insulin proposal that is expected to be defeated on the floor Saturday.

Mychael Schnell contributed.