Categories
Technology

What to do when tech sucks the fun out of your run

Tech can also disconnect us from something else that makes a fun run “fun”: other people and the carnival atmosphere.

Two years ago, as he was running past the starting line at the City2Surf, Todd Liubinskas’ training partner and co-founder of the 440 Run club, Trent Knox, told him to hand over his watch.

Todd Liubinskas (left), and Trent Knox.

Todd Liubinskas (left), and Trent Knox.Credit:edwina pickles

“I had my Garmin on, and he goes ‘give it to me’ and he said ‘just focus on your breathing’,” recalls Liubinskas, who did his first City2Surf as a seven-year-old.

Knox says he could see that his friend, who shot out too fast, was already anxious about achieving his splits.

“I wanted him to get out of his head,” says Knox, who, along with Liubinskas, is leading the Under Armor run team at the race. Without the distraction of his watch from him and chronically checking his pace from him, he relaxed: “You can run a race a hundred different ways and get the same time.”

Liubinskas, whose goal was to run the 14 kilometers in under 70 minutes, did it in 64 minutes and managed to enjoy himself, too.

“There will be people who will keep looking at their watch the whole time, ‘Oh I’ve got to get this, and I’ve got to get that,’ and you miss everything,” says Liubinskas, who hasn’t worn a watch to track his runs since.

With numbers for this year’s City2Surf lower than in previous years, Knox has been asking people why they’re not signing up. They have told him, he says, they would prefer not to run because life, and COVID, have got in the way of training, and they won’t get a PB.

It’s a shame, says Knox. “It doesn’t matter if you’re not at your best; it’s about being together.”

Being together and, after COVID’s many variations as well as a nasty flu season, a celebration of being well.

A colleague of mine had been hoping to train for the event, but illness made a mockery of her plans. She has decided to run – or walk – anyway, and reset her expectations of her.

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“I used to feel frustrated if I wasn’t able to jog up heartbreak hill – if I had to resort to walking,” she says. “But now I’m just so grateful to be well enough to participate at all (as a result of having had COVID) that I’m just happy to jog some and walk however much.”

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Categories
Entertainment

Angelina Jolie expresses her emotions as she drops daughter Zahara off at Spelman College

‘I’m gonna start crying’: Angelina Jolie expresses her emotions as she drops daughter Zahara off at Spelman College

  • The Oscar-winning actress, 47, was seen in a clip on Instagram Wednesday
  • She was accompanying her daughter, 17, to the Atlanta educational institution
  • Jolie said she was ‘holding it together’ on the emotional day
  • Jolie and ex-husband Brad Pitt, 58, are parents to six children: Maddox, 21, Pax, 18, Zahara, Shiloh, 16, and twins Vivienne and Knox, 14

Angelina Jolie was emotional as she dropped off her daughter Zahara Jolie-Pitt at Atlanta’s Spelman College Wednesday.

The Oscar-winning actress, 47, was seen in a clip on Instagram Wednesday posted by Darryl Holloman, who is Spelman’s vice president for student affairs, as she helped Zahara, 17, move into the college.

The Maleficent actress said, ‘I’m gonna start crying… I have not started crying yet,’ adding that she was ‘holding it together.’

The latest: Angelina Jolie, 47, was emotional as she dropped off her daughter Zahara Jolie-Pitt, 17, at Atlanta's Spelman College Wednesday.  The two posed with Darryl Holloman, who is Spelman's vice president for student affairs

The latest: Angelina Jolie, 47, was emotional as she dropped off her daughter Zahara Jolie-Pitt, 17, at Atlanta’s Spelman College Wednesday. The two posed with Darryl Holloman, who is Spelman’s vice president for student affairs

The president of the college, Dr. Helene Gayle, reassured the Eternals star that she would have ‘plenty of time’ to be emotional at other collegiate functions, joking that the events are aimed to ‘purposefully to induce’ emotions and ‘bring it all out.’

Jolie said she’s ‘holding it together still,’ adding, ‘I heard tomorrow night’s the big deal.’

Hollman asked Jolie, ‘How does it feel to be a Spelman mom?’ to which she said, ‘I’m so excited; I’m so excited.’

Hollman posted a picture of Jolie and Gayle posed together, as well as a selfie with Jolie and Zahara, which he captioned, ‘Welcome to campus..Zahara, c’2026!!’

The Maleficent actress said, 'I'm gonna start crying ... I have not started crying yet,' adding that she was 'holding it together'

The Maleficent actress said, ‘I’m gonna start crying … I have not started crying yet,’ adding that she was ‘holding it together’

The A-list actress chats with the president of the college, Dr. Helene Gayle, on the summer day

The A-list actress chats with the president of the college, Dr. Helene Gayle, on the summer day

Jolie said she was 'so excited' to see her daughter embark on the latest step in her education

The actress donned an all-black ensemble of a blouse with pants and sandals

Jolie said she was ‘so excited’ to see her daughter embark on the latest step in her education

Jolie in July posted a group shot of Zahara with a group of her collegiate colleagues, writing, ‘Zahara with her Spelman sisters!

‘Congratulations to all new students starting this year. A very special place and an honor to have a family member as a new Spelman girl.’

Jolie and ex-husband Brad Pitt, 58, are parents to six children: Maddox, 21, Pax, 18, Zahara, Shiloh, 16 and twins Vivienne and Knox, 14. Maddox is currently attending South Korea’s Yonsei University.

Pitt earlier this month told Vanity Fair that he was ‘so proud of’ Zahara as she was set to attend Spelman, a historically Black college for women.

‘She’s so smart,’ he said. ‘She’s going to flourish even more at college. It’s an exciting and beautiful time to find her own way and pursue her interests. I’m so proud.’

I added: ‘Where does the time go, right? They grow up too fast. It brings a tear to the eye.’

Jolie in July posted a group shot of Zahara with a group of her collegiate colleagues, writing, 'Zahara with her Spelman sisters!'

Jolie in July posted a group shot of Zahara with a group of her collegiate colleagues, writing, ‘Zahara with her Spelman sisters!’

Zahara's father Brad Pitt, 58, earlier this month said he was 'so proud of' her as she was set to attend Spelman, a historically Black college for women.  He was snapped in LA at the Bullet Train premiere

Zahara’s father Brad Pitt, 58, earlier this month said he was ‘so proud of’ her as she was set to attend Spelman, a historically Black college for women. He was snapped in LA at the Bullet Train premiere

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Categories
Sports

Nick Kyrgios smashes Alex de Minaur, Canadian Open round of 16, score, highlights, US Open

If there was any doubt about Nick Kyrgios’ US Open hopes, there is not now.

Fresh from his three-set victory over world No.1 Daniil Medvedev, Kyrgios demolished his Australian compatriot Alex de Minaur in straight sets (6-2, 6-3).

His clinic in Canada, which sees him move into the quarter-finals, didn’t see the volatile Australian turning on his box at times.

As late as the penultimate game, Kyrgios was blowing up at his team for their “lack of support” as he was broken.

But just as quickly he responded, winning in style a game late to progress through to the final eight.

“(Today was) incredibly tough,” he said.

“After yesterday’s big high, after playing Daniil and the crowd was amazing, it’s a day I’ll probably never forget.

“Today was really hard mentally for me to go out and play Alex, we’re such good friends and he’s been having such a good career so far and carrying the Australian flag for so long, it was tough mentally to play a friend, especially if they’re Australian.

“I just got out here and got the job done. I played the way I had to play. He’s a helluva player, if he plays to his strengths from him, he’s one of the best players from the back of the court and he’s so fast.

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Nick Kyrgios is through to the quarter-finals.  Photo: Getty Images
Nick Kyrgios is through to the quarter-finals. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: AFP

The win means more than meets the eye because it sees him move back inside the world top 30 in the ATP rankings and crucially a seeding at the US Open, which gets underway on August 29.

With his round of 16 win Kyrgios is now the new world No.27. A win in the quarter-final over Hubert Hurkacz will see him climb as high as No.21.

“It was a goal, more so that I don’t get one of the big titans or gods the first-round, I can actually work my way through the draw, if the draw is kind,” he said on court.

“I always feel as if my game is right there. I feel like no matter who I play, today I felt amazing, and let’s keep it going.”

Indeed, de Minaur appeared “shell shocked” as a “mature” Kyrgios ran riot in the opening set, where the Wimbledon runner-up claimed the opening four games.

De Minaur eventually got on the scoreboard in the fifth game as he managed to hold serve for the first time in the match.

But with his fourth ace of the opening set, Kyrgios moved to a 5-1 lead and soon after claimed the first set 6-2 in just 23 minutes

“As flawless as sets come,” it was said in commentary. “A quite ridiculous level from Nick Kyrgios.”

Alex de Minaur lost in straight sets against Nick Kyrgios. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: AFP

After being on his best behavior during the first set, Kyrgios starting firing up early in the second set.

He actions were described as “pure venting” as he turned on his box in the opening games of the second set.

Nonetheless, Kyrgios took an early break in the second set and never looked back.

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Categories
Australia

‘Major barriers’ to restoring Australia’s degraded coastal ecosystems as scientists push for national plan

Squeezed between tropical wetlands and the Great Barrier Reef, the wetlands of Mungalla Station should be a colorful haven teeming with life.

The former pastoral property in north Queensland was, until not long ago, choked with weeds and devoid of fish.

James Cook University’s Center for Tropical Water and Aquatic Ecosystem Research associate professor Nathan Waltham describes efforts to restore it to health as the most rewarding project he has ever worked on.

It involved seven years of exchanging scientific knowledge with the Nywaigi traditional owners.

“It’s been a two-way learning street and seeing country slowly healing and seeing the Indigenous rangers become so inspired, creating jobs for Indigenous youth has just been so rewarding,” Dr Waltham said.

“Unfortunately, it’s very small scale, and we need to now be thinking about this as an example that can be taken to much larger scales.”

Harder than it needs to be

Restoration projects like the one at Mungalla have experienced success around Australia.

But new research led by Megan Saunders, a senior research scientist at the CSIRO’s oceans and atmosphere division, and Dr Waltham reveals there are major barriers to projects going ahead at the scale required to restore the nation’s degraded coasts.

An aerial image of a wetland surrounded by tropical green vegetation.
Mungalla Station is now restored to a coastal wetland.(Supplied)

They found there was insufficient funding to restore many degraded sites and that Australia lacked a consistent approach to mapping and classifying coastal and marine ecosystems.

Processes to engage with traditional owners on restoration projects are often not even executed, they found.

Mungalla’s health has also slightly declined since its restoration project concluded, highlighting the need for ongoing love and care.

Sometimes when restoration projects do receive funding, they are brought unstuck by complex approval processes.

“[It can be] anywhere from 50 per cent, 60 per cent of the allocated funding time just to get the approval and, unfortunately, that is a challenge we have to break down,” Dr Waltham said.

“That has possibly huge implications on projects even starting.”

A portrait image of a smiling woman wearing glasses and a blue top, standing in front of the sea and mountains in the background.
Dr Saunders is the lead author of the research into scaling up coastal and marine restoration work.(ABC Far North: Christopher Testa)

Climate the biggest threat

The main threat to coastal low-lying areas is, unsurprisingly, climate change and its associated threats such as more severe storms.

Scientists this month confirmed frequent El Niño events caused hundreds of kilometers of coastal mangroves in the Gulf of Carpentaria to die.

Dr Saunders, who specializes in coastal and marine restoration, said Australia needed a national plan to restore coastal ecosystems, involving state and local governments, First Nations people, philanthropic groups and the finance sector.

Examples of coastal restoration in environments that have been irreversibly altered include the retrofitting of seawalls in Sydney Harbor to make them a more suitable habitat for marine life to flourish.

Dr Saunders said adopting a road map similar to the one set out in their research paper could make Australia a “world leader” in coastal restoration.

Indigenous Rangers from the Carpentaria Land Council look at dead mangroves
Mangroves along the coast of the Gulf of Carpentaria have died in recent years due to the effects of climate change.(ABC North West Queensland: Lucy Murray)

Meanwhile, she said, across the nation, there was a lot of work to do.

“Oyster reefs in Australia have declined by 92 per cent since the arrival of Europeans and the coastal development activities that have happened,” Dr Saunders said.

“We’ve also lost 95 per cent of Tasmanian kelp beds more recently due to warming water temperatures, so our natural assets, in particular, are in decline due to climate change.”

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Categories
US

Democrats push ahead with Manchin-Schumer spending bill despite lack of knowledge on fiscal implications

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House Democrats appear determined to forge ahead with the Manchin-Schumer social spending and taxation plan despite their lack of knowledge on the fiscal implications of the legislation.

According to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), a nonpartisan agency that analyzes the impact of legislation on the budget, it will be “weeks” before an updated analysis can be completed on the bill, officially called the Inflation Reduction Act.

“Given the scope of the amendments to title I, Committee on Finance, CBO expects that it will be a few weeks before we can fully analyze and estimate those budgetary effects, at which point we will provide a complete cost estimate for the legislation,” CBO Director Phillip Swagel wrote in a Thursday letter to Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who serves as chairman of the Senate Committee on the Budget.

The CBO completed an analysis on the original “Build Back Better” bill that passed the House in November, but not on the latest version of the bill agreed to by Sen. Joe Manchin, DW.Va., and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., that passed in the Senate on Sunday.

VULNERABLE HOUSE DEMOCRAT SAYS HE WILL SUPPORT MANCHIN-SCHUMER SPENDING BILL, POINTING TO ITS LIKELY PASSAGE

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi listens as President Donald Trump speaks at the 68th annual National Prayer Breakfast, Feb. 6, 2020, in Washington.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi listens as President Donald Trump speaks at the 68th annual National Prayer Breakfast, Feb. 6, 2020, in Washington.
(AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Despite the unavailable data, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has scheduled a vote on the bill for Friday, raising questions about why Democrats seem to be in a rush to pass the legislation amid uncertainty over party unity behind it and sharp criticism from Republicans.

The rush to vote on the legislation also serves as a stark reminder of Democrats’ heavily scrutinized efforts to pass a health care reform bill, known as ObamaCare, in 2010 without members of Congress knowing the full contents of the bill.

“We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,” Pelosi said at the time.

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According to Democrats, the Inflation Reduction Act spends $433 billion, but would raise $739 billion in revenue over a period of years.

Categories
Technology

Unity Signs Multi-Million Dollar Contract To Help US Army And Defense Agencies

Popular video game engine Unity has had a lot of bad press over the last year, the result of things like large-scale layoffs and some really terrible comments from its CEO. Today the trend continues, as it was recently announced that the company has signed a new multi-million dollar, three-year deal with a technology company that will see it become the “preferred real-time 3D platform” provider for the US government and its various defense agencies and militaries.

Unity is a widely used video game engine that is often cited as being lightweight, easy to work with, and flexible, allowing indie devs and large studios to create games that can scale across multiple platforms, like Xbox, PC, and Switch. The engine powers numerous games, like Among Us, V Rising, Call of Duty Mobile, and Cuphead. But this flexibility and power have also attracted the attention of folks outside of the game industry, including companies that help build simulations and other systems for the US government and military.

As announced earlier this week, Unity is parenting with CACI International on what the company calls an “exciting” three-year, multi-million dollar deal that will help it become the “preferred real-time 3D platform for future systems design and simulation programs across the US Government.”

If you, like most folks reading this, don’t know what CACI is, here’s how the company describes itself on its own website:

CACI is a $US6 ($8) billion company whose mission and enterprise technology and expertise play a vital role in our national security, safeguarding our troops, and enabling our government to deliver cost-effective and high-quality support for all Americans.

This sounds a lot like Unity is once again cutting deals to help the US government and military in developing technology that could aid soldiers and the country’s ability to fight wars overseas. And while some might not mind working on such tech, as we saw last year, many staff members at Unity did indeed have an issue with how the company was handling these deals. There were reports that some employees were working on parts of the engine that would benefit Unity’s government and military contracts, yet the devs had no idea.

Kotaku has contacted Unity about this latest contract and how it plans to keep its game engine devs separate from or informed about its military and government contract work with CACI.

Categories
Entertainment

‘We’ll still be watching in 50 years’: how Raymond Briggs’s The Snowman changed Christmas | TV

yesSome people are so famous for so long that they become meshed in all our lives. Raymond Briggs, who died on Tuesday, was one of those people. Briggs illustrated his first book by him, Ruth Manning-Sanders’s Peter and the Piskies: Cornish Folk and Fairy Tales, 64 years ago, and quickly set about creating a string of classic books, many shot through with his trademark melancholy by him. Fungus the Bogeyman reveled in a quiet British worldliness; When the Wind Blows was terrifying enough to scar an entire generation emotionally, and Ethel & Ernest managed to convey the small hopes and thwarted ambitions of mid-20th century life in a way that would put to shame many important authors covering the same period.

And yet, despite this breathtaking output, The Snowman looks set to be Briggs’s defining work. First published in 1978, The Snowman was a wordless picture book that Briggs saw as a counterpoint to the murk of Fungus, something he designed as “clean, pleasant, fresh and wordless and quick”.

However, when you think of The Snowman, you probably don’t think of the book. This is because the animated TV adaptation instantly became an indelible part of British culture. The Snowman was first shown by Channel 4 on Boxing Day 1982, and was such a success that it was nominated for an Oscar. It is a testament to the power of the film that this fact – one that most animated shorts would brag about loudly – ​​has been largely forgotten. Instead, we collectively clutched The Snowman to our hearts with such intensity that it is almost impossible to imagine life without it.

Raymond Briggs in 1980, two years after publication of The Snowman.
Raymond Briggs in 1980, two years after publication of The Snowman. Photograph: ANL/Rex/Shutterstock

It’s a work of incredible beauty, hand-drawn and animated in such a way that it feels as if it could slip through your fingers at any moment. Lines blur and shapes shift. The textures of the characters’ clothes dance slowly. During a motorbike sequence, trees fly at the camera so quickly they become abstract. At times, it can feel hallucinogenic.

And then there is the song. Howard Blake’s Walking in the Air is a pure and weightless daydream. It’s the only point in the film where we hear a human voice, and it accompanies a spectacular sequence where a snowman and a boy fly to the north pole.

I’m old enough to remember The Snowman from the start, in the early 1980s when my mum invariably made a big deal about the family watching it together. Over the years, it became a Christmas tradition, holding steady through the weird phases when it was introduced by David Bowie and Mel Smith. And with repeated viewing comes familiarity and then, sadly, boredom. Something I’ve noticed about people my age is that The Snowman became such a part of our culture that it was easy to mock. The sincerity of Walking in the Air, especially, made it an easy target for ridicule.

The snowman on a motorbike and the little boy in his dressing gown
Motorized mayhem … The Snowman. Photograph: Channel 4/Allstar

Everyone comes back to it at the end, however. This is down to The Snowman’s secret weapon: the precision with which it nails the low-humming sadness of Christmas. The snowman and boy have the adventure of a lifetime but, the next morning, the snowman has melted. In the final shot, the boy stands over a mound of slush, attempting to process his grief from him. There’s no reassurance, no promise of a return. Everything you love will one day leave you. merry christmas

A look back at Raymond Briggs’ most famous illustrations – video obituary

This element of The Snowman gives it the unerring ability to change with you as you age. Watching it with my children now, with my mum no longer with us, The Snowman somehow means even more to me than when I was a child. This why we’ll still be watching it 50 years from now.

The Snowman changed Christmas television, too. Every year we are inundated with animated picture-book adaptations where the melancholy is ramped up. Sometimes they work (Julia Donaldson’s Stick Man, about a stick who aches with loneliness), and sometimes less so (Michael Rosen’s We’re Going on a Bear Hunt, which was overlaid with a truckload of imported faux-sincerity), but they can all be traced directly back to The Snowman.

We might be in the grip of a scorching hot August, but don’t be surprised if Channel 4 screens The Snowman in the next few days to commemorate all of Raymond Briggs’s remarkable achievements. And don’t be surprised if a ton of people watch it.

Categories
Australia

Arrernte boxing academy helping troubled kids get on the right track and stay there

Jason Lord says his life hit a fork in the road when he was 14.

“I was a troubled kid, stealing cars, I was robbing people and quite violent and angry,” he says.

“I was a kid who was heading to Berrimah Prison.”

A court ordered him to put on some boxing gloves and get in the ring.

Luckily, he says, he met a good person “who wanted to give back a bit and saw something in me.”

“I robbed him a few times but continued to box; he continued to look after me, which is crazy.”

jason lord
Jason Lord says it’s his turn to give back.(ABC Alice Springs: Samantha Jonscher)

Mr Lord, an Arrernte man and traditional owner for Alice Springs, said his mentor’s compassion, alongside the sport, changed his life.

“All the trouble and all the crap that I got up to, boxing was always there; it was that little safe haven that kind of kept me together,” he says.

He believes this is part of the sport — the ring teaches people balance, structure, self-control, and ambition.

Now, it’s his turn to give back.

Arrernte boxing academy training
Jason Lord says boxing teaches balance and self-discipline.(ABC Alice Springs: Samantha Jonscher)

care comes first

On any given day you’ll find serious boxers of any gender, Indigenous and non-Indigenous, sparring inside the ropes of the Arrernte Community Boxing Academy.

But you’ll also see kids who’ve just learned to walk trying gloves on for size while they watch older kids give it a go.

“Our whole focus is on making people happy,” Mr Lord said.

“We’re a custodian club, having that name on Arrernte country.”

Arrernte Boxing Academy floor
Jason Lord says anyone is welcome at the gym.(ABC Alice Springs: Samantha Jonscher)

He says what really sets the gym apart from others is that care, culture and self-control are at the heart of its project.

“Not just Aboriginal culture but the culture that brings people here,” he says.

“We provide love and that environment for people of all ages, everyone who comes here gets the same treatment.”

A woman boxing in a ring.
The academy puts culture, care and self-control at the center of its gym.(ABC Alice Springs: Samantha Jonscher)

He hopes the gym creates the same environment that kept him out of Berrimah and gives young people the love and care they need to be “put back together again.”

The academy works with schools, “kids on the streets,” and has started branching out into remote communities.

Mr Lord has been recognized for his work with young people — he was the 2022 Alice Springs NAIDOC Week advocate of the year.

The academy in its current form opened in November last year and Mr Lord says he’s seen young people make big changes in that time.

“We go a bit deeper when we work with these guys, you know; we break them down through sweat and tears.”

Arrernte Boxing young and old
Boxers of all ages and genders are welcome at Arrernte Boxing Academy.(ABC Alice Springs: Samantha Jonscher)

Boxing as therapy

Early mornings, the gym runs kungkas (women)-only classes.

Nirosha Boaden is a regular at these classes. She has boxed for 15 years and, like Mr Lord, believes it changed her life from her.

Nirosha Boaden
Nirosha Boaden says from personal experience boxing can change lives.(ABC Alice Springs: Samantha Jonscher)

“I was living in out-of-home care — like a lot of the youth that comes here — and then I started up boxing,” she said.

Ms Boaden now works in youth mental health in Alice Springs and says she’s professionally seen what the gym can do.

“Especially here in communities where traditional Western therapies don’t really work, boxing is great.

“It teaches kids and adults how to be in everyday life, particularly around emotion regulation.”

women boxing
Kungas classes attract women of all abilities.(ABC Alice Springs: Samantha Jonscher)

anyone welcome

Ms Boaden says Arrernte Boxing Academy stands apart from other gyms because it genuinely feels inclusive.

“Everybody who comes here knows that this is a place for everyone of all cultures and levels. It’s really inclusive,” she says.

Sarah Landers, a Durri woman who also regularly attends the kungkas class, agrees.

Sarah Landers
Sarah Landers is new to boxing but says she feels right at home.(ABC Alice Springs: Samantha Jonscher)

Relatively new to the sport, Ms Landers started at the gym after her 14-year-old son started training in the evenings.

She says she’s seen her son “become a lot more confident” since he started boxing and that he’d begun to value his health and eat healthily.

“He lives and breathes boxing now, he’s really inspired,” Ms Landers says.

“This is my little social outlet; we go for coffee afterwards and just laugh the whole time, there’s a real family feeling.”

Arrernte boxing Academy external
The academy opened at its current location in late 2021.(ABC Alice Springs: Samantha Jonscher)

This is exactly what Mr Lord is aiming for.

“It’s a safe, caring environment,” he said.

“If this was my place as a kid, I’d be a whole different person and that’s what this place is about.”

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Categories
US

Man who fired nail gun at FBI building called for violence on Truth Social in days after Mar-a-Lago search

A man identified by two law enforcement sources as Ricky Shiffer, who died in a confrontation with police after firing a nail gun at an FBI Cincinnati building, appeared to post online in recent days about his desire to kill FBI agents shortly after former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence was searched.

Two law enforcement officials confirmed Shiffer’s name to NBC News. Shiffer attended the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, according to three people aiding law enforcement who saw him in photos taken from the day of the attack, however it’s unclear if he went inside the building. Shiffer frequently posted about his attendance at the Capitol on social media.

On Truth Social, a social media platform founded by Trump’s media company, Trump Media & Technology Group, Shiffer appeared to have posted a message detailing his failed attempt to gain entry to the FBI building.

“Well, I thought I had a way through bullet proof glass, and I didn’t. If you don’t hear from me, it is true I tried attacking the FBI, and it’ll mean either I was taken off the internet, the FBI got me, or they sent the regular cops while,” the account @RickyWShifferJr wrote at 9:29 am ET, shortly after police allege the shooting occurred.

Shiffer posted to Truth Social multiple times in the days after the FBI searched Trump’s residence about wanting to engage in violence. One post called for people to arm themselves and be ready for “combat.”

“We must not tolerate this one,” he wrote.

Shiffer’s Truth Social account, which was seen by NBC News on Thursday evening, has since become unavailable.

After another user responded that his photo and information had been forwarded to the FBI, Shiffer’s account responded: “Bring them on.”

In response to another user asking if Shiffer was advocating for terrorism, Shiffer’s account responded that users should kill FBI agents “on sight” and also target a vague list of enemies who try to stop the slayings.

In reply to another user on Tuesday, Shiffer responded, “You’re a fool if you think there’s a nonviolent solution.”

On May 7, Shiffer replied to a post by Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Green on Twitter, in which she wrote, “I know they are trying 1984, but I’m feeling 2016 vibes.”

“Congresswoman Greene, they got away with fixing elections in plain sight,” Shiffer wrote. “It’s over. The next step is the one we used in 1775.”

On the same day, responding to a post by Donald Trump Jr. on Twitter imploring users to “Get ready” because “the midterm variant (of COVID-19) is coming and it’s going to be really scary,” referencing conspiracy theories that COVID -19 is manufactured or not dangerous, Shiffer responded, “Do not comply.”

Pro-Trump internet forums erupted with violent threats and calls for civil war in the hours and days after the Mar-a-Lago search, including from at least one person who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Many Republican lawmakers have criticized the Biden administration over the search.

Attorney General Merrick Garland on Thursday called criticism by Trump allies of the Justice Department “unfounded,” as did FBI Director Christopher Wray, who said Thursday that threats against the FBI “should be deeply concerning to all Americans.”

Trump repeatedly posted to Truth Social after the search, including to insinuate that the FBI had planted evidence.

Categories
Business

Capel Court scammers steal $250k from NSW widow, $2.56m stolen altogether

A group of sophisticated scammers have stolen a quarter of a million dollars from a widow in NSW.

Lily*, a retiree from the NSW Mid North Coast near Port Macquarie, has been left reeling after learning she poured her $250,000 fortune into a fake investment scam.

The woman’s term deposit account was maturing and she was searching for a better return on her money.

In February this year, she was paying for her groceries at her local Woolworths when she picked up a magazine that had an advertisement inside it for an investment company called Capel Court.

“I contacted Capel Court as a result of the advert in the publication I’d seen, I’d noted the phone number and I rang them,” Lily recalled.

The so-called investment company had an online login portal and multiple employees with mobile and office phone numbers listed.

After going back and forth with company representatives for several weeks, including having a solicitor look things over, Lily eventually transferred her money in March believing she was investing in a European Investment Bank government bond.

Just a few months later news.com.au exposed that the Capel Court investment scheme was a sham. Including Lily’s losses, scammers have stolen at least $2.5 million that news.com.au knows of from six Australian victims. The highest individual loss totaled $750,000 and even an accountant in his 40s fell for the scheme.

After coming across the article and realizing she had been duped, Lily said, “I was stone cold, absolutely shocked. Probably for two weeks I cried on and off.”

Lily doesn’t have children and her husband has passed away so she was planning to leave whatever was left of her life savings to medical research to help cancer and Alzheimer’s patients.

She spoke to two different scammers who called themselves David Jones and Stephen Jones who answered all her questions and guided her through the process.

They promised her a 6.45 per cent return on her investment, with documents to back that up, which would mean she would be receiving $16,000 per year from dividends.

They tried to pressure her into depositing the money by saying there were limited spots available in the bonds fund as it was oversubscribed.

Lily almost wasn’t able to deposit her money because of the flooding along the east coast earlier this year.

“The flooding came between where I lived and where the bank was,” she said.

During the floods, the scammers called her up several times trying to get her to send the $250,000 onto them.

Finally, on March 10, Lily went into her local Westpac branch and by teletransfer, she moved $250,000 into a bank account for an instant payment system called Cuscal.

She claims bank staff didn’t ask questions and partly blames them for this unfortunate situation.

“I didn’t have any more contact [with the scammers] after everything was signed and sealed,” she said.

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In May, Lily learned she had been scammed after reading news.com.au’s previous articles.

Sure enough, when she went on the website had disappeared and she wasn’t able to get in touch with David or Stephen Jones.

“I’ve had a shocking two and a half months. I have to be [upbeat] otherwise I’d be so depressed I’d probably top myself,” she said.

Westpac wouldn’t comment on Lily’s individual case citing privacy reasons. They did not respond to questions about how they allowed an elderly woman to transfer $250,000 in one payment without raising the alarm.

“There has been a rise in investment scam activity, and we encourage all Australians to be vigilant,” a bank spokesperson said.

“Westpac invests heavily in scam prevention and has robust processes in place to alert and protect customers. We work hard to recover money for customers where possible.

“Investment scams often promise low risk for high returns. We encourage people to do their research and seek independent financial advice before making an investment.”

Sadly, this is not the first time this scamming syndicate has duped Australians out of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

News.com.au has previously reported on this same group of scammers, who posed as Barclays and Macquarie Bank and EQR Securities.

They scammed one Melbourne man out of $700,000, another schoolteacher out of $500,000, a retired couple lost $200,000 and an accountant fell for it too, losing $160,000. Another widow lost $750,000.

In October last year, retired Queensland couple Antje and Bardhold Blecken had $200,000 stolen from them when they mistakenly believed they were investing in a Barclays Bank term deposit.

Then in March, Melbourne man Andy* thought he was investing $700,000 into bonds with Capel Court. It was fake and he lost his life savings.

Robert*, an accountant, also sank $160,000 into the fraudulent Capel Court group while NSW couple Jody and Corey Bridges lost $500,000 to the same scam.

Michelle Lowry transferred $750,000 to EQR Securities in December last year, which also turned out to be fake.

News.com.au can definitively link these separate scam websites because the same aliases and mobile numbers were used by the fraudsters.

The scammers used multiple aliases including William Hughes, Ben Davis, Jacob Price, Oliver James and of course David Jones.

These particular scammers are fans of rapid payment platforms like Cuscal, Money Tech/Monoova and also cryptocurrency platforms including Binance, TechMarket AU/ED Australia and ElBaite. They have also used bank accounts through the Commonwealth Bank, ANZ, Citibank and NAB to channel money. It’s understood many of these accounts are under investigation.

In May, news.com.au reported on Melbourne widow Jacomi Du Preez, who lost $760,000 from the life insurance payout of her husband in an elaborate Macquarie Bank term deposit website that turned out to be fake.

Luckily, Ms Du Preez realized it was a scam within a day and was able to recover all her money.

A cyber security expert, Nick Savvides, told news.com.au these particular scams are “sophisticated” and “well-resourced”.

He believes it is likely they had a group of at least 20 people working together to steal large sums of money.

The money has probably ended up overseas and could be part of an organized crime gang.

Names withheld over privacy concerns

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