August 2022 – Page 865 – Michmutters
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US

After Roe, legal fights loom over abortion pills and out-of-state travel

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The Supreme Court’s three liberal justices, in denouncing their colleagues’ decision to eliminate the nationwide right to abortion, warned last month that returning this polarizing issue to the states would give rise to greater controversy in the months and years to come.

Among the looming disputes, they noted: Can states ban mail-order medication used to terminate pregnancies or bar their residents from traveling elsewhere to do so?

“Far from removing the court from the abortion issue,” Justices Stephen G. Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan wrote in dissent, “the majority puts the court at the center of the coming ‘interjurisdictional abortion wars.’ ”

The overturning of Roe v. Wade after nearly 50 years is expected to trigger a new set of legal challenges for which there is little precedent, observers say, further roiling the nation’s bitter political landscape and compounding chaos as Republican-led states move quickly to curtail access to reproductive care. It is possible, if not probable, that one or both of these questions will eventually work its way back to the high court.

“Judges and scholars, and most recently the Supreme Court, have long claimed that abortion law will become simpler if Roe is overturned,” law professors David S. Cohen, Greer Donley and Rachel Rebouché wrote in a timely draft academic article cited by the dissenting justices, “but that is woefully naive.”

As a result of the ruling in Dobbsv. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, abortions — both the surgical procedure and via medication — are banned or mostly banned in 13 states. Several others are expected to follow in coming weeks.

White House debates declaring abortion access a ‘health emergency’

The Biden administration has pledged to ensure access to abortion medication, which is used in more than half of all terminated pregnancies in the United States, and prohibit states from preventing their residents from traveling out-of-state for care. But a month after the dobbs ruling administration officials are still debating how they can deliver on that promise beyond the president’s executive order to protect access. A White House meeting Friday with public-interest lawyers was designed to encourage legal representation for those seeking or offering reproductive health services.

Democratic leaders and liberal activists have called on President Biden to take bolder action, especially on medication abortion. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) said in an interview that he has directly urged the president to make clear that abortion providers in states controlled by Democrats should be able to ship pills to patients anywhere in the country, whether or not the patient’s state has enacted a ban. Pritzker advised the president to assert federal authority over the US mail system, he said, and specify that no one will be prosecuted for prescribing or receiving them.

“People ought to be able to receive their medication in the privacy of their own home even if they live in a state where the procedure is not allowed,” Pritzker added, saying Biden appeared “very receptive” to the idea.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Pritzker’s characterization of the conversation.

Republican state attorneys general are preparing for a court fight, said Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), accusing Biden and the White House of exhibiting a “consistent disrespect for the law and the constitution and the Supreme Court.”

“We’re anticipating that he’s going to do this,” Marshall said.

Antiabortion lawmakers want to block patients from crossing state lines

Already, the manufacturer of the abortion medication mifepristone has sued the state of Mississippi and promised that additional lawsuits would be filed in other states. It remains to be seen whether the Biden administration will intervene in one of those cases or file its own legal challenges.

The Justice Department has activated a “reproductive rights task force” to monitor and push back on state and local efforts to further restrict abortion, but officials have not fully detailed their plans. Attorney General Merrick Garland said during Friday’s White House event that “when we learn that states are infringing on federal protections, we will consider every tool at our disposal to affirm those protections — including filing affirmative suits, filing statements of interest, and intervening in private litigation.”

The Food and Drug Administration approved mifepristone in 2000, finding it safe and effective to end an early pregnancy. The medication, now authorized for the first 10 weeks of pregnancy, is used with a second drug, misoprostol, to induce an abortion.

Among the unresolved questions is whether FDA approval of medication preempts state action. Legal experts say it is unclear whether the federal government would succeed if it challenged state restrictions on abortion medication, and that it will depend on how those measures are written.

Garland said soon after the Supreme Court overturned gnaws that states may not ban mifepristone “based on a disagreement with the FDA’s expert judgment.” The agency is charged with evaluating the safety and efficacy of drugs, and federal law generally preempts state law when two measures are in conflict.

Melissa Murray, a New York University law professor, said it was important for Garland to make a strong statement but that it is not a panacea in uncertain legal terrain.

“Even though the administration has said states can’t ban mifepristone on the grounds that it is somehow unsafe, that doesn’t mean they can’t ban it for other purposes. That’s an open question,” said Murray, who was written extensively about reproductive rights.

An administration heath official said the White House and the FDA realize that if states succeed in banning the abortion pill, or imposing sharp restrictions, the federal government’s authority on a range of medications could be undermined.

“If states want to ban vaccines, can they?” asked the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about the issue. “What if a state were run by Scientologists?” the official said, referring to the movement that has long opposed psychiatric medications.

The FDA lifted some restrictions on abortion pills in December, allowing providers to send medication through the mail in states that do not prohibit telemedicine for abortions. At least 19 states ban the use of telehealth for medication abortion, and Republican lawmakers in more than a half-dozen states have introduced or passed legislation to ban or severely restrict abortion medication, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights .

Abortion is now banned in these states. See where laws have changed.

The federal case in Mississippi, filed before the Supreme Court’s June ruling in dobbsoffers a window into the coming legal disputes over abortion pill access.

GenBioPro, which sells mifepristone, initially sued Mississippi in 2020 over additional requirements the state imposed, including a waiting period and counseling. The office of Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch (R) said in recent court filings that the Supreme Court’s decision allowing states to ban abortion strengthens the state’s position. The case is not about the drug’s safety but the state’s authority over abortion “regardless of the means by which the abortion is induced,” Fitch’s office wrote.

Mississippi’s trigger law, which took effect in July and bans nearly all abortions, makes no distinction between surgical abortions or abortions induced by medication, the office said.

Gwyn Williams, an attorney for GenBioPro, said the FDA has the power to decide which medications are safe. Individual states, she said, “do not get to legislate away the power Congress granted to FDA.” The company, she said, intends to file additional legal challenges in other states.

Legal experts point to one of the few cases to raise similar questions. In 2014, Massachusetts tried to ban an FDA-approved opioid called Zohydro. Then-FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg recently recalled that she was deeply worried about the “rationale and the precedent it could set.” At the time, she warned Massachusetts officials that the move could prompt other states to ban “such vital medical products as birth control or RU-486,” the abortion pill.

A District Court judge sided with the opioid manufacturer and said the FDA’s approval preempted state law. Massachusetts withdrew its regulations and did not appeal, meaning other judges are not required to follow the same legal reasoning.

Lawrence O. Gostin, director of Georgetown University’s O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, said FDA approval of drugs, including in the abortion context, “should supersede any state restrictions” because the agency is responsible for setting a national uniform standard for what drug patients can get access to in the United States.

The Biden administration has an “extraordinarily strong legal claim,” he said. “Any other decision could open a floodgate of states making their own choices of FDA-approved medication, and that would be disastrous for the health and safety of Americans.”

Even so, he said the same conservative majority of the Supreme Court that erased the constitutional right to abortion “might just say, states license medical providers and can make judgments about what those providers can and can’t do.”

Ed Whelan, a fellow at the conservative Ethics and Public Policy Center, said federal preemption does not mean states are barred from dictating how — or whether — certain drugs can be used.

“Assume that the FDA approved a drug for use in physician-assisted suicide,” he recently wrote in National Review. “Why would anyone imagine that FDA approval overrode state laws barring physician-assisted suicide? Why should it be any different here?”

In a separate opinion concurring with the Supreme Court majority in June, Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh wrote that the court’s decision does not mean a state may block a resident from traveling to another jurisdiction to obtain an abortion. I have characterized the legal question as “not especially difficult as a constitutional matter” based on the “constitutional right to interstate travel.”

But Republican state lawmakers and national anti-abortion groups have put forward plans to restrict out-of-state abortions and modeled those proposals on the Texas six-week abortion ban crafted to evade judicial review. A Missouri bill, which failed to pass during the 2022 legislative session, would have imposed civil liability on anyone who helped a resident travel out of state to obtain an abortion. South Dakota’s governor has said she is open to such proposals, and an Arkansas senator has also expressed interest in similar legislation.

The Justice Department has emphasized that the Supreme Court’s ruling does not prevent women from traveling across state lines to terminate a pregnancy. Citing “bedrock constitutional principles,” Garland said individuals residing in states where access to reproductive care is banned “must remain free to seek that care in states where it is legal.”

Legal experts, though, say these constitutional defenses are subject to debate and have not been tested in court. Even if the Justice Department filed a lawsuit challenging such restrictions, litigation takes time.

“It’s not going to be instantaneous,” said Murray, the law professor. “In the meantime, what you have is a landscape of confusion, chaos and uncertainty where patients don’t know what their rights are and physicians don’t know how their medical judgment will interact with laws on the ground. That climate of fear and confusion can be just as effective as an outright ban.”

Categories
Business

Gas producers warned to provide they have domestic supplies for next year, or face ‘gas trigger’ export restrictions

The Resources Minister has put gas producers on notice that the federal government intends to pull the “gas trigger” to restrict their exports, unless they can provide the nation does not face gas shortfalls in 2023.

Madeleine King says she will issue a notice to suppliers, the first step towards enforcing the Domestic Gas Supply Mechanism, directing them to provide a detailed response on supply and export forecasts for next year.

The consumer watchdog has warned that despite Australia’s abundant gas supplies, the outlook for next year was “very concerning”, with most of that supply slated for export.

It warned the government to consider intervening or face the risk of gas shortfalls in 2023.

The federal government has the power to force gas producers to restrict exports of their excess supply to ensure supply for the domestic market, known colloquially as the “gas trigger”.

The trigger was due to expire next year, but Ms King says it will be renewed to 2030 and reformed so that it can be used at shorter notice.

The minister says she will make a decision in October on whether to proceed with imposing export controls.

If pulled, the gas trigger would come into effect from January next year.

Industry promises no gas shortfalls next year

The gas industry is attempting to ward off the threat of the government pulling the gas trigger, saying it has the supply to meet consumer demands next year.

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Categories
Technology

Bungie is disabling Destiny 2’s text chat due to a massive exploit

It looks like Destiny 2 players will have limited options in terms of communications for now, as developer Bungie briefly pulled the plug on text chat due to a game-breaking bug. The operator reports that the error is caused by a particular copy (a long string of copied and pasted text) being sent through the whisper channel. Players who receive this message are kicked out of the game, at which point they will receive an error message that says: “Unable to connect to the Destiny 2 servers. Check your network configuration and try again.”

This bug appeared as long ago as yesterday, and at that time many players were taking their protection into their own hands. Many players recommended manually closing Whisper channels and avoiding any areas with local or group chats to protect themselves from malicious messages. Some players would even leave their clans if they suspected that other clan members might be intentionally using these exploits.

Related: Destiny 2 will have a skill-based game in season 18, and a new raid is coming out in August

Shortly after the reports broke, Bungie made a call to shut down text channels in order to work on a long-term fix, announcing via Twitter that they were taking the action across all platforms for further investigation. At this point, it’s not clear how long it will take to get the necessary patch in order, although Bungie is asking players to stay updated with updates, and is sure to come out with one as soon as possible.

This exploit comes on the heels of another Destiny 2 security issue, in which Bungie . has been discovered Streamer sued MiffysWorld After repeated instances of cheating, harassment and threats that caused the operator to go through at least 13 alternate accounts.

Categories
Sports

Australia’s women’s rugby sevens team takes long way to Commonwealth Games gold

It might have been 6am on the Gold Coast, but the champagne was already popping at the Levi household.

“It’s never too early to start drinking when your two daughters win Commonwealth Games gold,” Maddi Levi said, after she and sister Teagan helped Australia’s women win the rugby sevens gold medal.

“I’m sure [mum will] be on it all day, celebrating.”

The Levis spoke with their family back home after the dominant 22-12 victory over Fiji at Coventry Stadium.

“They definitely had tears but lots of swearing!” Levi said.

“We got to stand next to each other [on the dais] so it’s pretty sentimental. We’ve achieved a Commonwealth Games medal, not many people can do that in their lives, let alone have their sister side by side.”

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Maddison Levi scores a try for Australia in the women's rugby sevens gold medal game
Maddi Levi had a great tournament for the Australians.(Getty Images: David Rogers)

Hard road pays off for the Pearls

Categories
Australia

Victorian crossbench MP launches bid to compel religious hospitals to provide abortions

Victorian crossbench MP Fiona Patten is looking to compel taxpayer-funded religious hospitals to provide abortions, contraceptive treatment and end-of-life options.

The Reason Party leader will introduce a bill into state parliament this week that would remove the right of hospitals that receive any taxpayer funding to refuse to offer reproductive health services and voluntary assisted dying due to “corporate conscientious objection.”

Ms Patten said imposed religious faith had no place in the public health system.

“Right now, women in Victoria face a whole range of barriers to accessing reproductive health such as abortions or even contraception, some of that geographically,” she said.

“But also it’s because a number of our publicly funded hospitals refuse to provide these services and we say that if you’re publicly funded, then you should provide the services that the public need.”

A blue building with Werribee Mercy Hospital sign surrounded by parked cars.
Fiona Patten singled out Mercy Health as an example of a religious hospital network that received public funding but withheld contraception and abortion services.(ABC News: Margaret Paul)

Ms Patten argued conscientious objection resulted in women being mistreated by the health system that they help fund.

She singled out Mercy Health as an example of a religious provider that did not offer some services.

“The Mercy Hospital, which is one of the largest obstetric hospitals in Victoria, it is a publicly funded hospital,” she said.

“They refuse to provide contraception, they refuse to provide abortions when patients need them and this is just not right.”

Private hospitals that did not receive any public funding would not be affected if the bill was adopted, nor would individual practitioners.

Fiona Patten wears a black pin stripe jacket over a white shirt and smiles the camera
Fiona Patten says the bill will be debated in the next fortnight.(Supplied)

Ms Patten said the bill aimed to ensure that abortions remained legal, available and safe in Victoria, and noted the controversial overturning of the Roe v Wade decision by the United States Supreme Court.

“We’ve all just seen what has happened in America and we need to ensure that women’s rights to abortion and to contraception and other reproductive health is enshrined and protected in this state,” she said.

“There is no reason to think that there won’t be pushes in Australia and in Victoria to change our abortion laws here.”

The Victorian Health Minister Mary-Anne Thomas declined to say whether the state government would support the bill.

“The Victorian government already has the most progressive laws in the nation when it comes to supporting women exercising their reproductive rights,” Ms Thomas said.

“As health minister, I will always champion the rights of women to access the sexual and reproductive health services that they need right across our state.”

Catholic hospital says ‘moral reasons’ behind abortion refusal

Mercy Health declined to be interviewed, but referred the ABC to statements on its website.

It said that as a Catholic provider, it valued the dignity of life from conception to death.

“There are two areas where, for moral reasons, we do not provide some services: being women’s health and end of life care,” the website stated.

It said its refusal to provide abortion and assisted dying services was “in accordance with the Hippocratic tradition of medicine.”

“We aim to do no harm, to relieve pain, to provide compassionate care for the whole person and to never abandon those in our care.”

Catholic Health Australia told the ABC it could not comment because it was yet to see the details of the bill.

Advocates say religious hospitals are denying a basic human right

Women’s Health Victoria is a statewide advocacy service that also offers online and telephone sexual and reproductive services.

CEO Dianne Hill said access to abortion was a fundamental part of comprehensive healthcare and women needed to trust that hospitals would care for all of their sexual and reproductive healthcare needs.

She said Women’s Health Victoria supported any legislative reform that improved access to abortion and contraception.

“Abortion and contraception access is compromised for women and people with a uterus due to systemic and structural inequalities including financial insecurity, geographic location, health issues, cultural safety and health literacy,” she said.

“Barriers created by healthcare services — where they may have provided a person’s maternity care but won’t provide contraception or abortion services — further exacerbate these issues, reduce choices and deny people’s reproductive rights.”

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Categories
US

Trump Once Tried to Build a Family Mausoleum Officials Called ‘Garish’

  • In 2007, Trump filed plans to build a mausoleum with four obelisks on his golf course in New Jersey.
  • The city called the plans “overwhelming and garish,” so he scrapped the idea.
  • The course is being used as a family grave site: Trump’s ex-wife was laid to rest there this month.

Though former President Donald Trump’s 2007 plans to build a mausoleum with four obelisks on his golf course in New Jersey were rejected by city officials who called the design “garish,” he ultimately managed to use his Trump National Golf Club property as a family gravesite.

More than 15 years ago, Trump began planning a family cemetery on the Bedminster, New Jersey, property. The size and design of the project has changed over the years, but this month his ex-wife Ivana became the first person known to be buried on the property.

Originally, Trump’s plans for the mausoleum — where he would eventually be interred — included a 19-foot-high, classical-style stone structure to be built at Trump National Golf Club, which features two courses, local news site NJ.com reported in 2012.

The mausoleum would have included “four imposing obelisks surrounding its exterior and a small altar and six vaults inside,” according to NJ.com. But, after encountering opposition from city officials who called the design “overwhelming and garish,” Trump floated the idea of ​​redesigning the structure as a “mausoleum/chapel,” The Washington Post reported.

Plans for the large-scale mausoleum were ultimately scrapped and Trump proposed several other cemetery redesigns, including a 284-plot portion of the golf course with burial sites available for purchase. No such cemetery has yet been built, but the presence of burial grounds on the golf course property could offer tax breaks to the business.

Ivana Trump was laid to rest on the property earlier this month in a modest grave in a grassy area behind the first hole of one of the courses, “not too far from the main clubhouse,” The New York Post reported. She died following a fall in her Upper East Side home on July 14.

The Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster is currently hosting the LIV golf tournament, which has recently faced controversy for being funded by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Categories
Business

Big four bank customers hit by $70k ‘loyalty tax’ by rising interest rates, research finds

Australian homeowners are being slugged with an extra $70,000 over the life of their loan by staying loyal to the big four banks and failing to refinance, new research has found.

It also revealed that the big four banks are raking in $4.5 billion each year as a result of the “loyalty tax” as the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) super-sized rate hikes are passed on to existing customers.

The RBA has raised interest rates from a record low of 0.1 per cent to 1.35 per cent since May.

The big banks are offering lower interest rates to attract new customers, the research from mortgage broker Lendi showed, while current homeowners are smashed by interest rate rises yet could make huge savings by switching home loan providers.

Lendi’s data showed that at the big banks existing customers are slugged an extra 0.91 per cent on interest rates compared to the offers for new customers.

This means at a big bank, customers are paying an interest rate that is 0.91 per cent higher – forking out an extra $70,000 over the life of a $500,000 loan.

Overall, the whole banking sector is charging current customers interest rates that are 0.86 per cent higher compared to new clients.

On Friday, ANZ Bank announced it would reduce standard variable interest rates for new customers refinancing to the big bank by between 0.1 and 0.5 per cent, yet it passed on the 0.5 per cent hike from July to existing customers.

Lendi chief executive David Hyman said when customers special fixed rates finish, most would not revert to the best available rate.

Instead, he advised customers to call their banks to ask for the same deals as new customers.

Record levels of refinancing

But a record 332,000 Aussies refinanced their properties in Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria in for the 2021/22 financial year, up 29 per cent on the previous 12 month period, according to the latest analysis released by digital settlement provider Pexa Insights.

Victoria recorded the highest volume of refinancing at 131,000 up by 23.7 per cent year-on-year followed by NSW with 127,600 an increase of 25.8 per cent year-on-year.

QLD experienced the highest growth in refinancing with 73,000 up 49.8 per cent for the last financial year.

All three eastern states recorded in excess of 150,000 new residential loans each, with QLD leading the way again with 160,000 home loans completed in the last financial year.

More than 472,300 new home loans were taken out across the eastern states with Victoria posting the highest growth in both new residential loans with 157,660 loans up 10.4 per cent year-on-year.

Mike Gill, Pexa Insights’ head of research, Mike Gill, said initially Australians were taking advantage of record low interest rates to refinance.

“There is now a clear correlation between the high numbers we saw during the financial year 21/22 and the Reserve Bank of Australia’s determination to lift interest rates twice before the close of the financial year,” he said.

“The record levels of new loans coincide with the strong buying and selling activity witnessed throughout the first half of the financial year 2022, in particular in Queensland which has experienced a state-based property boom across home buying and selling.

The race to attract new customers has become “highly competitive” between major and non-major banks for new loans across all three eastern states, he added.

“However, non-major banks recorded higher win/loss numbers for refinances in the same regions,” he said.

“Strong competition within the lending market can only lead to positive outcomes for consumers.”

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Categories
Technology

Intel confirms VPU chip for Meteor Lake CPU, proves leaker right again

Intel is definitely adding a VPU chip to its new 14th Gen Core “Meteor Lake” CPUs that will debut in Q3 2023, a year from now: with the VPU confirmed as the Versatile Processing Unit.

Intel confirms VPU chip for Meteor Lake CPU, proves leaker right again 03 |  TweakTown.com

The new Intel UPV was teased close to a year ago by leaker Moore’s Law is Dead, yet another leak of his confirmed… MLID explained back in September 2021: “Meteor Lake will get an integrated VPU Accelerator. It’s similar to the Neural in the Apple M1 for speech recognition, language models, and conceivably tons of apps by the time Meteor Lake launches“.

Intel confirmed the Versatile Processing Unit (VPU) in a new commit to Linux VPU driver. The new VPU driver was baked into the Linux Direct Rendering Manager (DRM) in the same fashion that graphics drivers get integrated.

Intel’s upcoming Versatile Processing Unit inside of the new 14th Gen Core “Meteor Lake” CPUs will be one of the Tiles inside, as Intel is moving into a new Tile-based CPU architecture. The new hybrid architecture that Intel will be using packs Redwood Cove and Crestmont CPU cores into the latest Intel Xe-LPG graphics architecture. Intel might be suffering with its GPU department now, but things will get better over time and Meteor Lake is going to (hopefully) come in like a wrecking ball against AMD in 2023 and beyond.

Intel says that the new VPU is a CPU-integrated inference accelerator for Computer Vision and Deep Learning applications. As for the VPU device itself, it will have the following components:

  • buttress: provides CPU to VPU integration, interrupt, frequency and power management.
  • Memory Management Unit (based on ARM MMU-600): translates VPU to host DMA addresses, isolates user workloads.
  • RISC-based microcontroller: executes firmware that provides job execution API for the kernel-mode driver.
  • Neural Compute Subsystem (NCS): does the actual work, provides Compute and Copy engines.
  • Network on Chip (NoC): network fabric connecting all the components.

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Categories
Entertainment

Sylvester Stallone slams Dolph Lundgren over upcoming ‘Drago’ spin-off

Sylvester Stallone has hit out at his long-time friend and co-star Dolph Lundgren over an upcoming spin-off to Rocky.

The 76-year-old US actor created the smash-hit Rocky franchise back in the ’70s, in which he stars as Philadelphia boxer Rocky Balboa across six films spanning three decades. He also reprized the iconic role in two believe films, with the third to be released in 2023.

And now, the cult favorite story is set to be repurposed yet again, with TheWrap announcing a new MGM project focusing on Lundgren’s Rocky IV character, Russian boxer Ivan Drago.

But the news hasn’t gone down well with Stallone, who launched an explosive post claiming Lundgren kept the production a secret from him, despite Stallone having created the character.

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Taking to Instagram with a lengthy statement, Stallone also hit out at original Rocky producer Irwin Winkler, 91, who won the Oscar for Best Picture for the breakout 1976 film.

“ONCE AGAIN, IRWIN WINKLER, this PATHETIC 94-year-old PRODUCER and HIS MORONIC VULTURE CHILDREN, Charles and David, are once again picking clean THE BONES of another wonderful character I created without even telling me,” Stallone wrote alongside a screenshot of the news.

“I APOLOGIZE [sic] to the FANS, I never wanted ROCKY characters to be exploited by these parasites …

“By the way, I once had nothing but respect for Dolph but he NEVER told me about what was going on behind my back with the character I created for him!!! REAL FRIENDS are more precious than gold.”

Stallone followed up the post with another furious rant, which featured a photoshopped image of Winkler wearing vampire teeth having sucked blood from Rocky’s neck.

“After IRWIN WINKLER and FAMILY SUCK ROCKY DRY!” Stallone captioned the post. “Presumed to be the most hated, untalented, decrepit [sic]producer in Hollywood and his cowardly children have found their next meal… Drago, RETURN MY RIGHTS BLOODSUCKERS!”

Rocky IV, which was released in 1985, is considered one of the most popular films in the franchise. It follows Rocky’s emotional journey to the ring to fight against Drago, who had fatally punched Rocky’s best friend Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) during an exhibition bout.

Stallone has previously opened up about his frustration over failing to secure rights to Rockytelling Variety in 2019 he had “zero ownership” of the franchise.

“Every word, every syllable, every grammatical error was all my fault. It was shocking that it never came to be, but I was told, ‘Hey, you got paid, so what are you complaining about?’” Stallone said.

“I was very angry. I was furious. Rocky is on TV around the world more than any other Oscar-winning film other than Godfather. You have six of them, and now you have believe and Believe II.

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Categories
Sports

Dockers veteran announces imminent retirement

Fremantle has confirmed David Mundy will retire at the end of the 2022 season.

Mundy, who recently turned 37, has played 371 games for the Dockers since being drafted back in 2003.

He is currently the competition’s oldest player and has played a big role in the Dockers’ resurgence throughout 2022, averaging 22.2 disposals, 4.7 clearances and 2.6 inside 50s per game.

“I’m incredibly proud, I’ve been living my dream for 19 years now and I’ve loved every bit of it,” Mundy said in a Fremantle statement.

“Not all of it has been easy, there’s been quite a few, really hard and emotional bits to it, but I’ve been able to grow as a person and as a player throughout my time at Fremantle and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

“I’m really proud of the person I’ve been able to develop into, the family I’ve been able to create, and my role within the football club. I feel I’ve grown from a skinny full back who didn’t want to talk to anyone, to being a part of the leadership group for a number of years now.

“I’m proud of that growth and that journey and I’m looking to get the most out of this season and explore what’s next.

“I’ve grown up at the Fremantle Football Club and I’ve spent more than half of my life in WA and associated with Fremantle.

“The entire Football Club, and each iteration we’ve had with players, staff and coaches, have been really supportive and it’s been a great environment to work in and strive for success and excellence.

“The whole club integration at the moment is the best it’s ever been, I love coming to work every day and it’s meant a lot to me.”

Mundy also paid tribute to his family, friends and family for the support over the year.

The imminent retirement leaves Mundy with no more than seven games left in his career if Fremantle plays the Grand Final.

He is currently 10th in VFL/AFL games played and will move into ninth ahead of Adam Goodes (372) in the coming weeks.





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