Categories
Technology

Winamp, the best MP3 player of the 1990s, just got a major update

Winamp.  Winamp never changes.
Enlarge / Winamp. Winamp never changes.

Andrew Cunningham

Back in the late 1990s and early 2000s, before the days of the iPod and the iTunes Music Store, there was an app called Winamp. People over the age of 30ish will remember Winamp as the premiere music player for people using Napster, Limewire, and Kazaa to illegally download Aerosmith MP3s to their Gateway desktop computers. (For anyone younger than that: it was like Spotify, but you needed to collect every single song you wanted to listen to manually and add it to the app yourself.)

Like a lot of influential Windows 95-era PC apps, it was eventually outpaced by newer software and business models and forgotten, but it’s technically never actually been dead. Winamp’s original incarnation petered out in late 2013, shut down by AOL after years of mismanagement. A company called Radionomy bought the remains of Winamp from AOL in January 2014 and leaked an update to the app in 2016; a revised version of this build was officially released in 2018, and a major version 6.0 update was planned for 2019.

This plan obviously didn’t pan out. But last week, for the first time in four years, Radionomy released a new version of Winamp. The release notes for Winamp 5.9 RC1 Build 1999 say that the update represents four years of work across two separate development teams, delayed in between by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Most of the work done in this build focuses on behind-the-scenes work that modernizes the codebase, which means it still looks and acts like a turn-of-the-millennium Windows app. The entire project has been migrated from Microsoft Visual Studio 2008 to Visual Studio 2019, a wide range of audio codecs have been updated to more modern versions, and support for Windows 11 and https streams have both been improved.

The final release will be version 5.9, with some features targeted for release in version 5.9.1 “and beyond” (version 6.0 goes unmentioned). It requires Windows 7 SP1 or newer, dropping support for Windows XP.

That said, in our limited testing the “new” Winamp is still in many ways an ancient app, one not made for the age of high-resolution, high-density displays. This may cause usability problems, depending on what you’re trying to run it on. But hey, for all you people out there still trying to keep hope alive, it’s nice to see something on Winamp.com that isn’t a weird NFT project and a promise of updates yet to come.

Listing image by Winamp

Categories
Entertainment

Bullet Train casts Brad Pitt as a wannabe reformed hit man fending off a star line-up of assassins

Brad Pitt might be one of our biggest and most enduring movie stars, but 30-odd years into his fame it’s just possible that he doesn’t get enough credit for the detail – and most importantly, sense of humor – that he brings to his roles.

From his star-making breakout in Thelma & Louise onwards, he’s made a pretty good fist of parodying the ideal leading man, using his dreamy looks as a slippery weapon – think back to his camp, whiny immortal in Interview with the Vampire; his personal trainer harebrained him in Burn After Reading; or his leathery, laconic stunt guy in Once Upon A Time in… Hollywood. (Serious Brad is never nearly as good; he’s a character actor trapped in a leading man mould.)

White man with blonde ponytail and soiled shirt stands before white woman with shaggy brunette hair and taupe trench coat.
Pitt described shooting the film to Collider: “It’s like shooting the old films, like a Hitchcock film with rear projection, but with the latest technology.”(Supplied: Sony)

At 58, Pitt is in the autumn of his blissful idiocy, and it’s a blessing – even if the movies aren’t always a match for his gifts. After stealing the fun but clunky The Lost City – in what amounted to an extended cameo, playing an absurdly macho CIA operative – he’s back to headline David Leitch’s new action movie Bullet Train, and he just might be the only thing keeping this frantic but feeble ride on the tracks.

Looking perfectly ridiculous – and somehow impossibly cool – in a bucket hat and dopey glasses, Pitt plays an unlucky hit man codenamed Ladybug, who finds himself in Tokyo, strutting to a Japanese pop cover of Stayin’ Alive and bound for the bullet train at the behavior of his unseen handler who doubles as his part-time therapist (Sandra Bullock, quite literally phoning it in).

A reformed thug of sorts, Ladybug has recently emerged from some kind of zen retreat that has him spouting goofy self-help mantras – “You put peace out in the world, you get peace back” – that play right into Pitt’s specialty of fusing the silly with the sublime.

Asian man with dark hair and stubble wears dark jacket and stands in doorway holding phone flanked by bright pink walls.
Despite being set in Japan, most of the film was shot in Culver City, California because of COVID travel restrictions.(Supplied: Sony)

On board the train, Ladybug has to snatch a suitcase full of cash from a pair of assassins straight out of a Guy Ritchie movie – Tangerine (Aaron Taylor-Johnson, sporting a douchey mustache and doing his best Ray Winstone) and Lemon (Brian Tyree) Henry, having fun with all the silly accents he must have absorbed on the last, London-set season of Atlanta).

There’s also a deranged assassin cosplaying as a schoolgirl (Joey King), a flamboyant hit man known as The Wolf (pop superstar Bad Bunny), and the shadowy, shapeshifting killer Hornet (Zazie Beetz).

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Categories
Sports

Buddy Franklin set to leave Sydney to join Brisbane Lions

Buddy Franklin has reportedly made a decision about his future and is set to turn his back on Sydney for a deal with the Brisbane Lions.

That is according to a report from Nine News Queensland reporter Michael Atkinson, who said he “can confirm the Brisbane Lions are the frontrunner to be his (Franklin’s) club next year”.

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“It’s my understanding that Franklin has informed the Swans that he won’t be playing in Sydney next year,” he continued.

“Franklin and his wife Jesinta have a desire to move their family up to Queensland to be closer to family on the Gold Coast. But it’s not the Suns where he wants to keep playing, Buddy wants to win more premierships and he’s identified Brisbane as the club most likely to help him achieve that goal.”

The report continues the Lions and Franklin’s management have already entered into discussions.

Atkinson said there is still some time to go for this deal to be actioned as no club can put a deal to Franklin until the trade period begins.

Franklin is a restricted free agent, meaning the Swans are able to match the bid.

Franklin is a restricted free agent because he is in his ninth season for the Swans and in the top 25 per cent of the club’s earners.

Any players outside the top quarter of earners or who have played 10 seasons at a single club will be unrestricted free agents.

It’s expected forward Dan McStay will likely head south as he has been strongly linked to a five-year $3 million deal at Collingwood.

The report has been immediately countered by Swans CEO Tom Harley who spoke off-air on 3AW’s Sportsday after an interview and said it was “news to him”.

But during the interview, he’d said: “There’s nothing to announce, but there’s nothing untoward at the same time (on Franklin’s future).

“There’s no hurry from our point of view and no hurry from his point of view.

“Things are all tracking well at the moment.”

Franklin and his wife Jesinta have made plenty of headlines in recent months after the bombshell news the 35-year-old believed the Swans were lowballing him.

Franklin joined the Swans from Hawthorn in 2014 on a nine-year $10 million deal but the star forward was looking for $700,000 per season.

While Franklin has been injury prone in recent years, the scenes of fans flooding onto the SCG when he kicked his 1000th career goal earlier this year showed he is still one of the sport’s biggest drawcards.

But reports of a move out of Sydney dominated headlines in early July and Jesinta told Channel 7’s The Morning Show “we’ve got options” when questioned about the speculation.

“There’s always rumors and speculation swirling around Bud, and I think when he’s coming to the end of such an amazing contract, this was always going to happen,” she said.

“But I think they’re just that; they’re rumors and they’re speculation.

“We’re really happy in Sydney – at the moment – ​​and we’ve got our life set up here, so we’ll just have to see what happens.

“I still feel like he’s got lots to give, and he still feels like he’s got great footy (left in him), and he feels so good.

“He keeps saying, ‘I feel like I’m 21,’ which is great. And the stats really show that as well.”

In May, Jesinta also said: “I think there’s still a lot of good football left in him, but it’s our dream, whether that’s in five years or 10 years or whenever, to be able to live closer to one of the grandparents and have quality time with them.”

Jesinta Franklin was the 2010 Miss Universe Australia and grew up on the Gold Coast.

The couple also own a beachside apartment just south of the Gold Coast and rumors are swirling they’re set to sell their Sydney home.

Read related topics:BrisbaneSydney

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Categories
Australia

Southern Queensland weather forecast for another wet spring

Authorities and farmers in Queensland are preparing for a wet spring after a “nightmare” winter of rain and flooding.

The Bureau of Metrology this week declared the Indian Ocean Dipole was “negative”, which typically meant wetter than normal weather over winter and spring for much of southern and eastern Australia.

The bureau said there was also a chance La Nina could re-form for a third time during spring.

Condamine farmer Jake Hamilton said he was slightly concerned about the forecast after an “absolute nightmare” winter of muddy paddocks at his southern Queensland property.

Mr Hamilton said he had received more than 150 millimeters of rain in May, which severely delayed the planting of crops.

“We’ve had a 75-tonne snatch strap tied to the front of our planting tractor for the last three months, and it has certainly got a lot of use,” Mr Hamilton said.

“We’ve been bogging machines left, right and centre, whether it’s tractors or sprayers, just trying to get through the mud.

“I don’t think anyone in our area is going to want to go through a harvest that was as wet as the planting that we just had.”

A tractor in a muddy paddock
Tractors have been getting bogged down in wet paddocks. (Supplied: Jake Hamilton)

Mr Hamilton said the season overall had been as good as farmers could have hoped for.

But he said if the forecast for a wet spring did eventuate, it could exacerbate problems with plant diseases.

He said combined with a shortage of fungicides, it could result in significant crop losses.

“But at the end of the day, it is just a forecast,” Mr Hamilton said.

“We’ve had La Nina years where we’ve had little to no rain, so we can only just keep an eye on the short range and see what happens.

“But at least we are sort of preparing for it to be quite wet.”

A man with a beard standing in front of some crops
Jake Hamilton says he’s slightly concerned about forecasts of a wet spring.(Supplied: Jake Hamilton)

Authorities get ready

Authorities have also started preparations for a wet spring, with flooding in Queensland this year having already claimed more than 20 lives.

Dam operator Sunwater said 11 of its 19 reservoirs across Queensland were either at or close to capacity.

A lot of water rushes over a dam spillway
Leslie Dam at Warwick is one of the 11 dams at full capacity.(Supplied: Chris McFerran)

Sunwater executive general manager of operations, Colin Bendall, said communities needed to be vigilant if more early spring or summer rain was coming.

“Some of the preparation we’ve been doing is we conduct exercises with the local disaster management groups, and the Bureau of Meteorology,” Mr Bendall said.

He said staff were also being trained in the use of emergency action plans in the event of any further spills from dams.

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wet-summer

University of Southern Queensland climatologist Chelsea Jarvis said there was between a 65 to 80 per cent chance regions such as the Darling Downs would exceed their median rainfall.

She said scientists would continue to monitor the situation to see whether the Indian Ocean Dipole strengthened towards the end of the year.

“The end of this Indian Ocean Dipole event, whether it be October or December, can also determine how the likelihood of rain going into summer,” Ms Jarvis said.

“The second thing I’d be looking out for is what’s going on in the Pacific Ocean with this La Nina event, it’s just sort of hanging out there.”

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Categories
US

4 former and current Louisville police detectives federally charged in Breonna Taylor raid | WDRB Investigates

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — The US Department of Justice charged four former and current Louisville police officers with federal crimes in connection with the fatal raid on Breonna Taylor’s home in 2020.

Former detectives Joshua Jaynes and Brett Hankison and current officers Kyle Meany and Kelly Goodlett face charges that include civil rights offenses, unlawful conspiracies, unconstitutional use of force and obstruction, Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a news conference Thursday.

The action caps a federal investigation that looked at how police obtained the search warrant for Taylor’s apartment, something a prior state investigation by Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron’s office did not pursue. Cameron has said that aspect was part of the Justice Department’s work.

The indictments made public Thursday allege that Jaynes and Meany “drafted and approved what they knew was a false affidavit to support a search warrant for Ms. Taylor’s home,” Assistant US Attorney General Kristen Clarke said in Washington. “That false affidavit set in motion events that led to Ms. Taylor’s death when other LMPD officers executed that warrant.”

While Jaynes, Hankison and Meany were federally indicted, Goodlett was “charged on information,” which typically means she has pleaded guilty or plans to. She was charged with one count of conspiracy.

Goodlett has a hearing scheduled in US District Court on Aug. 12. It is unclear if she has retained a defense attorney.

Louisville Metro Police Department Chief Erika Shields said in a statement that she is beginning termination procedures against Meany and Goodlett. Hankison and Jaynes have already been fired.

“While we must refer all questions about this federal investigation to the FBI, it is critical that any illegal or inappropriate actions by law enforcement be addressed comprehensively in order to continue our efforts to build police-community trust,” according to the statement.

Attorney Brian Butler, who represents Meany, declined to comment. Meany is accused of lying to the FBI.

Hankison was the only officer previously charged in the raid. A Jefferson County Circuit Court jury found him not guilty of wanton endangerment charges earlier this year.

Attorney Stew Mathews, who represented Hankison in his state trial, said Hankison turned himself in earlier today but didn’t have any additional information.

Jaynes attorney Thomas Clay declined to comment.

Jaynes, Meany and Hankison face a maximum sentence of life in prison.

In a statement, Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer said that “after two long years of relentless investigations, today’s indications are a critical step forward in the process toward achieving justice for Breonna Taylor. My thoughts are with Ms. Tamika Palmer, Breonna’s mother, and all those who loved and cared for Breonna.”

Fischer said he understood many people feel the case has taken too long, but there “can be no shortcuts to due process, no shortcuts to justice.”

Taylor’s family and other supporters welcomed the Justice Department’s announcement. At a news conference in Jefferson Square Park, the hub of protests in 2020 after Taylor’s death, attorney Ben Crump alluded to a well-known saying of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

“As Dr. King said, the moral arc of the universe is long, but it bends toward justice,” Crump said. “Well, today, it bent toward Breonna Taylor.”


Warranty questions

Jaynes asked a judge to approve a search warrant for Taylor’s home a day before the early-morning raid on March 13, 2020. He claimed in an affidavit presented to Jefferson Circuit Judge Mary Shaw that a postal inspector verified that drug suspect Jamarcus Glover, who had dated Taylor, was using Taylor’s home to receive parcels.

Glover was at the center of a narcotics probe by Louisville police. The warrant for Taylor’s home was executed around the same time that police served other warrants on suspected drug houses in the city’s west end — some 10 miles away, Garland noted.

“The affidavit falsely claimed that officers had verified that the target of the alleged drug trafficking operation had received packages at Ms. Taylor’s address,” Garland said. “In fact, defendants Jaynes and Goodlett knew that was not true.”

Tony Gooden, a US postal inspector in Louisville, told WDRB News in May 2020 that Louisville police didn’t confer with his office. He said a different law enforcement agency asked his office of him in January 2020 to investigate whether any potentially suspicious mail was going to the unit. The local office concluded that there wasn’t.

“There’s no packages of interest going there,” Gooden said.

Garland also accused police of covering up their “unlawful conduct” after Taylor’s death. He said Jaynes and Goodlett “conspired to knowingly falsify an investigative document” after the shooting and “agreed to tell investigators a false story.”

Jaynes’ indictment claims that in April or May 2020 he tried to get an LMPD officer identified as “JM” to say that he had previously told Jaynes that Glover had been receiving packages at Taylor’s home. However, “JM” had told Jaynes in January of that year that he had no information to support that, according to the indictment.

The indictment says Jaynes and Goodlett provided a “false Investigative Letter” to criminal investigators around May 1, 2020.

Around May 17, Jaynes texted Goodlett that a criminal investigator wanted to meet with him after Gooden’s account refuting the information in the warrant affidavit was reported, according to the indictment. (WDRB published the postal inspector’s remarks on May 15.)

The indictment says Jaynes and Goodlett met the night of May 17 in Jaynes’ garage, where Jaynes allegedly told Goodlett “that they needed to get on the same page because they could both go down for putting false information in the Springfield Drive warrant affidavit.”

During that meeting they “agreed to tell investigators a false story,” the indictment says.

Then, on May 19, Jaynes “falsely claimed” to LMPD Public Integrity Unit investigators that “JM” told him and Goodlett in January that Glover was receiving packages at Taylor’s apartment, according to the indictment.

The indictment says Goodlett made a similar claim to investigators for the Kentucky Attorney General’s Office in August 2020. And it says Jaynes told FBI investigators in June 2022 that “JM” had “made a nonchalant comment” that Glover was receiving “mail or Amazon packages “at the Springfield Drive apartment.


‘No package history’

LMPD’s internal investigation found that Louisville officers asked two members of the Shively Police Department to check with a postal inspector. They were told no packages were being sent to Taylor’s home.

In a May 18, 2020, interview with LMPD’s Public Integrity Unit, Shively Police Sgt. Timothy Salyer said he asked Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly, an officer who was shot and injured in the Taylor raid, about the search warrant affidavit after reading it following the shooting.

“Sgt. Mattingly stated he told Detective Jaynes there was no package history at that address,” Salyer told investigators, according to a summary of the interview.

The summary said Mattingly initially reached out to Salyer and Detective Mike Kuzma of the Shively department in mid-January 2020, at Jaynes’ request, to find out about packages going to Taylor’s apartment. Salyer said he was asked because he had a good relationship with a Louisville postal inspector.

In his interview, Salyer told LMPD investigators that he notified Mattingly that “no packages had been received at the address and the post office did not receive any packages either.”

Salyer said he later was contacted by two other LMPD officers — Detectives Mike Nobles and Kelly Hanna — about any packages going to Taylor’s home and said he “told them the same information,” according to the summary.

On April 10, 2020, about a month after Taylor was fatally shot by police, Salyer said he received a text from Jaynes, again asking about any packages going to Taylor’s home.

“(Salyer) told Detective Jaynes there were no packages in months delivered to the address and the location was flagged if any were detected and the Postal Inspector would be notified,” the summary said.

Jaynes also asked if Glover was receiving any “mail matter” and Salyer said he would check.

“Sgt. Sayler (sic) was confused as to why Detective Jaynes contacted him almost a month after the shooting incident inquiring about packages being delivered to the address,” according to the summary.

Nobles said he was confused about the “conflicting information on the affidavit as well,” the summary says.

When asked if she was going to issue a show-cause order as to why Jaynes shouldn’t be held in contempt for providing false information in an affidavit, Judge Shaw said she was “concerned but deferring to the FBI investigation.”

Jaynes was fired from the Louisville Metro Police Department in January for being untruthful. He appealed to the police merit board, which upheld the termination in June 2021, and then to Jefferson Circuit Court.

A judge also upheld the firing, ruling this June that the “crux of this case is the truthfulness of Mr. Jaynes’ statement in the search warrant affidavit.”

Clay, his attorney, has appealed that ruling.

Hankison was indicted on two counts of deprivation of rights for firing into a bedroom window in Taylor’s apartment that was “covered with blinds and a blackout curtain” after “there was no longer a lawful objective justifying the use of deadly force.”

He also faces charges for shooting through a wall of Taylor’s apartment and into a neighboring unit, endangering three people, including a then-3-year-old boy.

Taylor was inside the apartment with her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker.

LMPD has claimed that while Jaynes obtained a “no-knock” warrant, police repeatedly knocked on Taylor’s door and announced themselves before knocking it in.

Walker has said he never heard police announce themselves and believed the couple was being robbed. He fired a shot, hitting Mattingly in the leg.

Police responded with 32 shots, hitting Taylor six times. The 26-year-old died at the scene.

No drugs were found in her home.

The former detectives who fired the shots that struck Taylor — Mattingly and Myles Cosgrove — were not charged because they didn’t know about the false information in the search warrant, Garland said.

After the arrests, Mattingly said in a tweet: “The FBI used tactical teams to raid 4 officer’s/former officer’s homes early this morning over the Breonna Taylor case. It’s political theater. These officers had cooperated. There was no need for this show of force.”

This story may be updated.

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Copyright 2022 WDRB Media. All Rights Reserved.

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Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games: Ariarne Titmus says Cody Simpson, Kyle Chalmers love triangle affecting team emotionally

Ariarne Titmus has said the focus on the so-called swimming “love triangle” at the Commonwealth Games was taking its toll on the entire squad.

“It’s affecting us emotionally,” she said on Channel 10’s The Project on Thursday.

The Aussie team’s success in Birmingham has been overshadowed by speculation about relations between Kyle Chalmers, Emma McKeon and Cody Simpson.

Chalmers and McKeon dated for a few months. Their relationship first became common knowledge in September.

But it was revealed in May that Simpson and McKeon had become a couple and had even moved in together during a training camp.

Rumors of bad blood between the three surfaced when sprinting king Chalmers and Olympic legend McKeon appeared to avoid each other as the 4x100m mixed relay team celebrated their gold medal swim on the pool deck and during the medal presentations on Saturday morning.

Aussie swimming great James Magnussen described the sight of McKeon and Chalmers politely keeping their distance from each other as “awkward”.

All three have said there is no friction between them at all.

‘Affects us emotionally’

Swimming superstar Titmus appeared on The Project on Thursday after picking up four golds in the pool and helping break the world record in the 4x200m freestyle relay.

She was asked if the attention on the “love triangle” was hurting the team’s performance.

“We all certainly hear about it and it’s affecting our teammates so it affects us emotionally,” she told host Georgie Tunney.

“But I think we try to block it out. We’re such a close unit and we want to have each other’s backs and I think we did that this week.

“We want everyone to be happy and not going through those things so it did affect us but we certainly got through it.”

Titmus: ‘really proud’ at wins

Titmus said she was “low key confident” she would nab four gold medals in Birmingham but was nonetheless elated at her win.

“It’s crazy. I really feel proud and I’m so happy,” she told the hosts.

Grant Hackett revealed earlier this week that the trio at the center of the “love triangle” had sat down together over the storm that has swirled around them at the games.

He said media frenzy had indeed had an impact on the three swimmers, who all wanted to move on from it as soon as possible.

“They’re professionals, they’re teammates, they get along with each other, they respect each other where they need to, and they go out there and they execute performances for the country and they support one another,” he said on Nine’s TodayShow.

“This was a story that was back at the Commonwealth Games trials a couple of months ago, and the three of them put it to bed.

“Kyle’s come out very openly and said, this is a bunch of rubbish,” Hackett said.

“No one had any problems. They couldn’t believe the fuss around it.”

Meanwhile Simpson’s mother said she believed the swimmer is more than equipped to deal with the media scrutiny.

During an interview on Channel 7’s SunriseAngie Simpson claimed that the relentless media attention won’t bother her son, who previously dated American singer Miley Cyrus.

“I think he has been lucky because he has had so much history with press and media before, performing on stage for thousands of people,” she said on Wednesday morning AEST.

“I think the pressures of what he has dealt with in camp and at the Commonwealth Games has been pretty easy for him.

“It has given him an advantage to deal with a lot of those pressures and not let that stuff bother him.”

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Categories
Australia

Bakers Delight may serve up sexual harassment warnings to customers

But she said servers would also be trained to avoid risks “rather than plastering the walls with ‘this abuse won’t be tolerated’” messaging.

Gillespie said Bakers Delight had received sexual harassment complaints from staff in the past, but they were isolated incidents and she was confident they had been dealt with appropriately.

The federal government has pledged to fully implement the recommendations of Sex Discrimination Commissioner Kate Jenkins’ Respect@Work report.

Among the recommendations, Jenkins called for the Sex Discrimination Act to be amended to include a positive onus on employers to prevent workplace sexual harassment, rather than relying on complaints.

Bakers Delight has agreed with the watchdog to rectify the failings over 12 months, including by providing a 16-week training program for prospective franchisees, and developing a policy on dealing with the potential movement of perpetrators between stores.

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However, the Victorian Equal Opportunity and Human Rights Commission must go to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal to give it the power of a court-enforced order.

The agreement will be published in a move to increase the accountability of the employers’ undertakings.

The commission’s general counsel, Emily Howie, said it hoped the investigation would raise awareness among employers that they needed to be proactive to prevent sexual harassment rather than just reacting when it occurred.

Howie said while Bakers Delight had been a “very co-operative party”, the investigative and enforcement powers of the Victorian agency and a future federal model should be given more teeth.

“I think if governments take preventing sexual harassment seriously and want to make sexual harassment more enforceable, and if they do really want to remove that burden from people who suffer harm, then we need to increase the regulatory powers given to commissions like ours,” she said.

“It would give us powers to compel attendance and documents without the need to get an order from VCAT,” she said, adding it could also include the power to issue infringement notices.

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.

Categories
US

Dick Cheney rips ‘coward’ Trump in election ad for daughter Liz

Former Vice President Dick Cheney looks on as his daughter Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., takes the oath of office on the House floor on Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2017.

Bill Clark | CQ-Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

Former Vice President Dick Cheney assailed ex-President Donald Trump as a “coward” and a prime threat to the United States in a new campaign ad for his daughter, Rep. Liz Cheney, days before her Republican primary election in Wyoming.

“In our nation’s 246-year history, there has never been an individual who has posed a greater threat to our republic than Donald Trump,” the elder Cheney said in a straight-to-camera ad, which was shared online Thursday afternoon.

“He tried to steal the last election using lies and violence to keep himself in power after the voters had rejected him,” said Cheney, 81, who served for eight years as vice president in the George W. Bush administration.

“He is a coward. A real man wouldn’t lie to his supporters,” Cheney said. “He lost his election and he lost big. I know it, he knows it, and deep down, I think most Republicans know it.”

The 60-second spot, titled “He Knows It,” will run across Wyoming and online starting Friday, the Cheney campaign said. The ad comes less than two weeks before the Wyoming Republican primary, where the incumbent Cheney appears to be in trouble.

Cheney is Trump’s biggest Republican critic in Congress and a leading member of the House select committee investigating him over the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot. For her refusal of her to back down from her criticisms of the former president, she has been largely ostracized by her party of her and condemned by Trump’s loyal base of Republican voters.

Polls of the Aug. 16 Wyoming primary show Cheney trailing her top Republican opponent, Trump-backed Harriet Hageman, by wide margins. Hageman has echoed Trump’s false claims that his loss of him to President Joe Biden in the 2020 election was “rigged” by widespread fraud.

Yet Cheney, unlike some other House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump for inciting the Jan. 6 riot, has kept up her vocal attacks on Trump over the “Big Lie.”

Her persistence may have damaged her standing among some Republican voters, but it has not hampered her fundraising efforts: She has far outraised her competitors while assuring key donors and supporters that she will continue to hold Trump accountable. Dick Cheney has been involved in these talks as well, CNBC previously reported.

“Lynne and I are so proud of Liz for standing up for the truth, doing what’s right, honoring her oath to the Constitution when so many in our party are too scared to do so,” Dick Cheney said in the ad.

“Liz is fearless. She never backs down from a fight. There is nothing more important she will ever do than lead the effort to make sure Donald Trump is never again near the Oval Office. And she will succeed,” he said in the ad .

“I’m Dick Cheney. I proudly voted for my daughter. I hope you will too,” he said.

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Categories
Sports

Michael Cheika reunion poses ominous threat for Wallabies in Rugby Championship | Australia rugby union team

Wounded and wobbling, still missing key personnel and facing off against a former mentor, the Wallabies will be in ambush territory when they run into Estadio Malvinas for the first of two Tests against Argentina on Sunday morning. Unlike Australia, who lost the July series against England in desultory fashion, Los Pumas have their tails up and fangs bared after defeating Scotland 34-31 with a thrilling last-play-of-the-game comeback try a fortnight ago.

Although luckless with their injury toll, the men in gold were their own worst enemies in the 2-1 defeat to England, giving away too many penalties and easy points to a dead-eye kicker, and too often chancing their arm in risky counterattack from their own quarter when they maybe should have calmly turned the screws to earn the right to entertaining uptempo rugby. Like the ‘piddler on the roof’ at the SCG, they drank the Kool Aid dry but pissed it all away.

In Mendoza, the greatest threats come from within, most ominously in the form of Michael Cheika, the wily former Wallabies coach who will know what’s coming from his countrymen, maybe even more than they do. Cheika took the reins from Mario Ledesma as Los Pumas’ coach in March. Equally fluent in Spanish and attacking rugby, the 55-year-old is now a national hero after inspiring his men to an upset 2-1 win over Scotland before 30,000 fans in Santiago del Estero.

Those fans had waited three years to see their team play Test rugby again and they will be in full voice again at the arena that hosted their famous 2014 victory over the Ewan McKenzie-coached Wallabies. That night, despite Australia leading 14-0 after 15 minutes, Los Pumas calmly clawed back the ascendency to win 21-17 and notch a maiden win in the Rugby Championship after 18 straight defeats, and first over Australia since 1997.

That win was a turning point. The Pumas have grown in strength and confidence ever since. With growing support from all over Latin America (a potential fan base of over 600 million) and a reputation as giant killers (they demolished Ireland 43-20 at the 2015 World Cup and shocked the All Blacks 25-15 in 2020) they pose a dangerous reality check for the Wallabies.

Despite juggling his ongoing roles as coach of Lebanon for the 2022 Rugby League World Cup in October and director of rugby at the NEC Green Rockets franchise in Japan, Cheika has already instilled belief and tenacity into Argentine rugby. Trailing 31-20 with 15 minutes to go, Los Pumas nervelessly chased down Scotland to prove the 26-18 first test win in San Salvador de Jujuy was no fluke, and their coach has them on track for the 2023 World Cup.

Argentina and Australia at Cbus Super Stadium on the Gold Coast last year.
Argentina and Australia at Cbus Super Stadium on the Gold Coast last year. Photograph: Jono Searle/Getty Images

Cheika shares several traits with the big cats that prowl the chaparral terrain of Argentina. Pumas are cunning hunters famous for chasing down and hauling off prey far heavier than they are; Australia sit sixth in the World Rugby rankings, Argentina lurk nearby in ninth. They are also vocal beasts, much like Cheika, who inspired Australia’s epic win over Argentina in 2018, when they were down 31-7 but rallied to win 45-34.

With one win from Dave Rennie’s past six Tests and a 39% win record as coach, his Wallabies must roar on Sunday if they are to win back the early momentum and public goodwill squandered at home against England. Australian rugby fans are restless. They want the rolling mauls and running rugby that is the Wallabies’ trademark but they’ll settle for true grit and grinding to victory.

Rennie lost nine good men to injury in the England series and only a few have returned. Starting hooker Dave Porecki is now out with concussion and although Samu Kerevi was always absent for these Argentina Tests, the game breaking centre’s ACL injury at the Commonwealth Games means he is gone for the season. It gives the new young 12-13 pairing of Len Ikitau and Hunter Paisami time to alchemise in the midfield and bend the thick blue line made formidable by ex-NRL enforcer David Kidwell as Cheika’s defense coach.

With the returning Jordan Petaia and in-form flyer Tom Wright fighting for the fullback role, Rennie must use this series to at last unholster league convert Suliasi Vunivalu, criminally underused against England, on the right wing to mirror his wrecking ball Marika Koroibete. With such big guns shooting from each hip, even Cheika’s Pumas will run for the hills. The trick, as always, will be getting these marauders the ball and giving them space to run.

Although Noah Lolesio played a brave hand in Australia’s victory over England in Perth, Eddie Jones’s men quickly dismantled him. Lolesio is the future but for now only the hair-trigger hands of wildcard veteran Quade Cooper can conjure the time and space his match-winners need out wide.

Cooper gave Cheika a memorable goodbye when the coach quit as Wallabies boss in 2019, tweeting: “If he cared about Aus rugby he would have done it a while ago.” Now the exiled playmaker is back, he can deliver for the ones who care most about “Aus rugby” – the fans.

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Australia

Royal commission hears former soldier Gavin Tunstall loved army life until he saw children dead in Afghanistan

Searching for a purpose in life, Gavin Tunstall joined the Australian Army in 2005 and quickly found one.

He threw himself into army life and loved every moment.

“It gave me a group of men to be around. I started to feel like I had a family,” he told the Royal Commission into Defense and Veterans’ Suicide, which is holding hearings in Hobart.

But things started to fall apart when he was deployed to Afghanistan a few years later and saw the bodies of two young boys killed in combat.

“It’s not usual for children to be fighting, it’s not usual for children to be firing a machine gun,” he told the commission.

“It is not usual for me to be inspecting their dead bodies. I expected men.”

Mr Tunstall said he struggled to cope with what he had seen, and his mental health declined significantly.

“If you haven’t been in that situation you have no clue until you’ve gone through it,” he said.

“You can’t be trained for that. You don’t know how you’re going to react.”

He went on his first lot of mental health leave but said he soon started hiding his symptoms to get back to work and progress through the ranks.

A series of physical injuries — shoulder and ankle reconstructions and a torn anterior cruciate ligament — derailed his career, and led to him drinking alcohol on top of a cocktail of pain medication.

He was placed on limited duties, which he said his colleagues struggled to understand, and his mental health spiraled to a point where he was admitted to hospital in 2019.

Soldier
The lack of support for service personnel and veterans’ families has been a common theme of the royal commission.(ADF)

Change of medication ‘the start of everything’

Mr Tunstall was placed on medication and his mental health started to improve, but he said a new doctor and a change of medication meant things started to unravel again.

“That was the start of everything… I have no doubt what he did lead to what happened next,” he said.

“[I had] bad dreams, night terrors, started locking myself away in my room, started isolating myself from all my friends, anger, no tolerance of any noise.”

He was arrested on domestic violence charges in early 2020 and told the commission that the officer who arrested him was a member of the Army Reserves.

“He said he was tired of arresting veterans, and he had tears in his eyes,” he said.

Gavin Tunstall looks into the distance.
Mr Tunstall said he struggled to cope with what he saw in Afghanistan.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

Mr Tunstall was immediately readmitted to hospital for three months and discharged from the army on mental health grounds later that year.

His criminal charges were later dropped on mental health grounds.

Having lost his family and feeling betrayed by the job he loved while he waited for his discharge to be processed, Mr Tunstall said he thought about taking his own life.

“I struggle every day with the pain of my physical injuries and the mental anguish of my service. My life will never be the same again,” he told the commission.

Gavin Tunstall, with his arm in a sling, looks into the distance.
Mr Tunstall now works to help veterans like himself.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

With time and support in hospital, plus seeking psychological support, Mr Tunstall’s mental health gradually improved.

He said he was now working with a provider teaching veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder how to scuba dive, in a bid to ensure others do not go through what he did.

“I was a veteran in the dark, I’m now starting to get out of it,” he said.

“I want to offer that to other people like myself who are stuck. I don’t want any more [veterans] to take their own life.”

Gavin Tunstall looks at the camera.
Mr Tunstall said his family was getting no support.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

Families ‘given no support’

But while Mr Tunstall is receiving support, he told the royal commission his family had been effectively abandoned.

“My family pretty much lost their provider. My kids lost their dad. My wife lost her husband,” he said.

“They are sitting down there… with no support, in government housing, my three children are living like poor people and there is no assistance.

“I’m getting help, but they are getting nothing and it’s a common story.”

A lack of support for the families of service personnel and veterans has been a common theme of the royal commission during its six public hearing blocks.

The Hobart hearings will conclude next week, with the commission to hand down its interim report on August 11.

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