Categories
Sports

Richardson admits concern with Tassie bid as premier confirms stadium won’t be in bid

The official bid Tasmania will put to the AFL will not include a new stadium, according to state premier Jeremy Rockliff.

While a stadium will likely be built in the future, Rockliff confirmed on Wednesday that it would not be part of the initial bid.

“The stadium is not part of our bid. But of course the stadium is there to support AFL content in the future,” he told reporters on Wednesday.

“A stadium is an important part of an AFL team, we’re committed to that. That’s why we’ve got the feasibility study.”

While Colin Carter’s report into a 19th license in Tasmania stated the bid should not be contingent on a new stadium, the AFL has made it clear that one needs to be in the mix.

Richmond great and Tasmanian Matthew Richardson admits he is worried about the success of the bid.

“So they obviously can’t come up with the (money) right now. They think that they need a stadium, but they want to get this proposal in to the commission and the presidents, and (the stadium) can’t go ahead until they’ve got the funding,” Richardson told sportsday.

“Gillon (McLachlan) has said that success is contingent on the stadium, so that’s a real concern now for this bid going forward you would think.”

Brownlow Medalist Gerard Healy added that the push for a 19th license has lost considerable steam since the departure of premier Peter Gutwein.

“This has moved immeasurably since Peter Gutwein left office,” Healy said.

“It seems to me that either they’ve worked out that it is politically untenable to trump up $750 million (for a stadium), and their first crack was we’re going to pay 50 per cent, and now they’re trying to get a deal up that doesn’t have a stadium included.

“I think if you’re sitting around the AFL table, you’d be saying ‘the only time we’re ever going to have the leverage to get a new stadium is before we rubber stamp the team’.

“I think the license was always contingent on the new stadium being built and I think it is different to taking the Hawks and the Kangaroos down there because they are part of the footy economy as it stands right now.

“To get a new franchise with $50 million down in Tassie up and running, as a 19th side, which creates all kinds of issues for the AFL, I think you’d want to have the security of the brand new glamor stadium.”

Richardson agreed with the Gutwein comment, adding: “As soon as he left, it felt like momentum was lost straight away, didn’t it?”

A formal presentation will be made to the AFL club presidents before the end of August.





.

Categories
US

Opinion | Meet some of the Kansans who stunned the experts on abortion rights

Placeholder while article actions load

We should not read too much into Kansas voters’ surprisingly lopsided rejection last week of an amendment that would have declared that the state’s constitution does not guarantee a right to abortion. After all, this is one result in a single state — fewer than 1 million people voted.

But I do think the results in Kansas have an important message for all of America: Even if the country’s elected officials and activists are clearly split into a Team Blue largely unified around one set of views and a Team Red with opposing ones, the nation’s voters are more complicated.

The ballot initiative, which would have cleared the way for Kansas Republicans to pass a near-total ban on abortion, failed because many unaffiliated and Republican voters opposed it. This wasn’t just a story of Democrats outvoting Republicans. Significantly more Kansans are registered Republicans (about 850,000) than Democrats (500,000). And turnout among Democrats (about 57 percent) last week was only slightly higher than for Republicans (55 percent). If the only people who voted on the initiative had been registered Democrats and registered Republicans, and they all voted with their leadership’s position, it would have passed by a 62-38 margin.

But that’s not what happened. Instead, around 170,000 people who did not participate in the partisan primaries voted on the abortion question. (It’s likely most of them are registered as unaffiliated and therefore can’t vote in party primaries.) This outcome — tens of thousands of people in Kansas who won’t join the Democratic Party turning out in august to vote in favor of abortion rights — was far from obvious, and that’s why many political experts, including me, were stunned by the result.

That said, this result didn’t come from nowhere. About 30 percent of American adults are Republicans, about 30 percent Democrats, and around 40 percent independents. Kansas’ electorate is more Republican (44 percent) and less Democratic (26 percent) than the nation overall but also includes a big bloc of unaffiliated voters (29 percent). Some independents are people who don’t follow politics closely and have fairly undefined views. But most consistently vote for one party or the other. And even if they don’t, many have strongly held views on particular issues.

Ruth Marcus: Why I fear Indiana, not Kansas, charts the future of abortion rights in America

One such voter is Tyler Dillman, 32, who lives near Kansas City. “I don’t feel like any party accurately reflects my ideology. I’m ‘conservative’ on topics like immigration, national security, and economics, but more ‘liberal’ on education, gay rights, and health care, and find myself in the middle on many other social issues,” Dillman, who works at a higher-education research firm, told me in an email.

But he felt strongly about taking the pro-abortion rights stand on this ballot measure.

“The Dobbs decision was a watershed moment for me,” Dillman wrote. “Previous attempts to ban abortion, or significantly curtail it, always felt like political posturing, because you knew that there was a solid foundational backstop in the Roe v. Wade decision.”

Tillman is one of eight Republican or unaffiliated Kansas voters who voted for abortion rights whom I reached via email and text message.

Their comments have good and bad news for both parties.

Greg Madison, 69, a retiree in the Kansas City area, told me he used to be a Democrat and often votes for Democratic candidates but, “I changed my registration to unaffiliated as a protest or statement against the two-party system.”

Cynthia Smith, a 63-year-old retired lawyer who lives in Lawrence, home of the University of Kansas, voted for abortion rights as part of her broader disenchantment with the Republican Party.

“Shortly after the January 6 insurrection, my husband and I changed our registration to unaffiliated because we were disgusted with the Republicans in our government, but did not feel the Democratic Party represented us either,” Smith wrote.

Even if all the unaffiliated Kansans who voted last week took the pro-abortion rights stance, the results would have been about 50-50, assuming everyone else voted along party lines. The election results suggested that more than 80,000 Republicans, around a fifth of those who voted in Kansas last week, also took the pro-abortion rights position, leading to the 59-41 blowout for that side. That’s surprising, at least at first glance. I had assumed that registered Republicans who turned out for primaries would be aligned with the party on one of its long-standing core positions.

But that result didn’t come from nowhere, either. Polls have long suggested that from one-fifth to one-third of Republicans support abortion rights, depending on how the question is phrased. These Republicans can rarely express that preference without voting for a Democratic candidate.

And we know that Americans often have views that conflict with their party’s stands. Measures to raise the minimum wage, expand Medicaid and reduce gerrymandering have passed in red states over the past decade, even as GOP leaders oppose all three positions. A 2020 ballot measure to lift a ban on affirmative action failed in heavily Democratic California.

I asked Melissa Clark, a 42-year-old registered Republican who works in sales in the Kansas City area, what restrictions on abortion she would support. “None,” she replied.

“Politicians should not be involved in health-care decisions,” she wrote. “Women and all humans can make their own healthcare decisions. … I think it is a personal decision that is something that should be left in the hands of the individual under all circumstances.”

“Generally Republicans have gotten more of my votes,” said Cheryl Bannon, a 61-year-old retired title closing officer in the Wichita area who is also a Republican. “I am not in favor of large giveaway programs. However the Republicans are just getting too far out there — ‘don’t touch our rights to buy assault rifles in any way but let’s make women and, yes, children carry embryos to term.’”

The good news for Democrats is that all eight I interviewed said they voted for Joe Biden in 2020 and would oppose Donald Trump again in 2024. This is a very small sample, but it fits with lots of evidence that there is a small-but- real bloc of anti-Trump Republicans and that independent voters are really turned off by the former president.

“If it’s between Biden and Trump, I will absolutely vote for Biden. If a moderate Republican were to come into the mix, I may vote for them but I can’t vote for someone who is anti-choice at this point,” said a 26-year-old Kansas City-area Republican named Sydney, who works in financial services and asked that we do not use her last name.

“Can we please have Romney or another Bush?” said Katie Minnis, a 42-year-old Republican who lives in Lawrence and works in corporate sales.

The good news for Republicans is that these voters aren’t likely to become consistent Democratic votes, even as Trump-like figures dominate the GOP.

Stephanie Sharp, a 46-year-old Kansas City-area software manager who described herself as a lifelong Republican, said that she would back Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s reelection bid this fall. But Sharp said she won’t support US Rep. Sharice Davids, a Democrat who holds a swing seat in the Kansas City area that the party desperately needs to hang on to, casting Davids as “a mediocre and embarrassing representative.”

The biggest lesson from Kansas is one people like me keep forgetting — the voters aren’t nearly as predictable as we think they are.

Categories
Business

Staff to go, kombucha and yoga can stay

But supply is starting to catch up to the huge demand for talent, though the labor market is still tight. The chief executive of talent marketplace Expert360, Bridget Loudon, said on Thursday that the shift prompted the company to do a small round of lay-offs, affecting seven staff.

“There are more talented engineers at the moment,” Loudon said. “This is largely driven by lay-offs in the tech sector from the majors (Microsoft, Klarna, Atlassian, Linktree) to earlier-stage companies.”

loading

Linktree declined to answer questions about its finances but confirmed there had been no changes to its perks and benefits or plans to move to the new office despite the lay-offs.

In a blog post on Tuesday, chief executive Alex Zaccaria stressed his sadness at the lay-offs. He said the company had made big plans and hired to meet them on the assumption that the strong economy of 2021 would last.

“Instead, conditions changed faster than expected and those assumptions I made were wrong,” Zaccaria said.

A spokesman for Immutable said the lay-offs were a hard choice but necessary and the company was continuing to grow in other areas.

Eucalyptus chief executive Tim Doyle said the company was not changing its use of perks because they helped build its culture and brand. “They are things we want to preserve,” Doyle said.

Justin Angsuwat, chief people officer for the venture capital fund Blackbird, said he had spoken directly to more than a dozen founders recently about how they should approach perks in the downturn.

Contrary to others’ views, he said perks alone were ineffective for companies.

“All the data shows that very few perks on their own drive any employee retention or high performance,” Angsuwat said, in contrast to things like leave policies and promotion opportunities.

He said start-ups would make different calls based on their finances and culture. Some were cutting perks quickly because it was better than having to lay off staff. Others were adjusting their perks to ensure they were more closely linked to their company values, which was effective at keeping and motivating staff.

“During a bull run market… the trade-off is deciding which one of these perks do I spend $1 on,” Angsuwat said.

“In the current market, the trade-off isn’t between which perks to spend it on, it’s between perks and headcount or perks and runway [how long before the company runs out of money]so the equation is very different.”

The Business Briefing newsletter delivers major stories, exclusive coverage and expert opinion. Sign up to get it every weekday morning.

Categories
Technology

Microsoft urges Windows users to run patch for DogWalk zero-day exploit

Credit: Dreamtime

Microsoft has confirmed that a high-severity, zero-day security vulnerability is actively being exploited by threat actors and is advising all Windows and Windows Server users to apply its latest monthly Patch Tuesday update as soon as possible.

The vulnerability, known as CVE-2022-34713 or DogWalk, allows attackers to exploit a weakness in the Windows Microsoft Support Diagnostic Tool (MSDT). By using social engineering or phishing, attackers can trick users into visiting a fake website or opening a malicious document or file and ultimately gain remote code execution on compromised systems.

DogWalk affects all Windows versions under support, including the latest client and server releases, Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022.

The vulnerability was first reported in January 2020 but at the time, Microsoft said it didn’t consider the exploit to be a security issue.

This is the second time in recent months that Microsoft has been forced to change its position on a known exploit, having initially rejected reports that another Windows MSDT zero-day, known as Follina, posed a security threat. A patch for that exploit was released in June’s Patch Tuesday update.

.

Categories
Entertainment

Madonna reveals her reps thought her career was OVER after accidentally revealing her BACKSIDE

While her illustrious career has spanned more than five decades, Madonna revealed Wednesday on The Tonight Show her reps thought her career was over after an accidental backside flash in the early 1980s.

The 63-year-old singer appeared was promoting her new album Finally Enough Love: 50 Number Ones on The Tonight Show, which will be released on August 19.

Madonna performed at the very first MTV Video Music Awards in 1984, when her dress flipped up and showed part of her backside… which her reps thought would be the end of her career.

Career: While her illustrious career has spanned more than five decades, Madonna revealed Wednesday on The Tonight Show her reps thought her career was over after an accidental backside flash in the early 1980s

Career: While her illustrious career has spanned more than five decades, Madonna revealed Wednesday on The Tonight Show her reps thought her career was over after an accidental backside flash in the early 1980s

Promoting: The 63-year-old singer appeared was promoting her new album Finally Enough Love: 50 Number Ones on The Tonight Show, which will be released on August 19

Promoting: The 63-year-old singer appeared was promoting her new album Finally Enough Love: 50 Number Ones on The Tonight Show, which will be released on August 19

Fallon pointed out that it said in the liner notes Like a Virgin was supposed to be the first single, which Madonna said she thought was ‘controversial,’ though it turned out to be nowhere near controversial as her wardrobe malfunction.

‘I did that show and I walked down the very steep stairs of the wedding cake and I got to the bottom and I started dancing around in my white stiletto pumps fell off,’ Madonna began.

‘And I was trying to do this smooth move like, dive for the shoe and look like it was choreography. And my dress flipped up and my butt was showing. Can you imagine,’ she added.

Liner notes: Fallon pointed out that it said in the liner notes Like a Virgin was supposed to be the first single, which Madonna said she thought was 'controversial,' though it turned out to be nowhere near controversial as her wardrobe malfunction

Liner notes: Fallon pointed out that it said in the liner notes Like a Virgin was supposed to be the first single, which Madonna said she thought was ‘controversial,’ though it turned out to be nowhere near controversial as her wardrobe malfunction

Smooth move: 'And I was trying to do this smooth move like, dive for the shoe and look like it was choreography.  And my dress flipped up and my butt was showing.  Can you imagine,' she added

Smooth move: ‘And I was trying to do this smooth move like, dive for the shoe and look like it was choreography. And my dress flipped up and my butt was showing. Can you imagine,’ she added

‘Those were the days when you shouldn’t show your butt to have a career. Now it’s the opposite,’ she continued.

The music icon added that it, ‘happened by accident and when I didn’t even know my butt was showing,’ adding, ‘it wasn’t even like the whole butt it was just like a butt cheek, like half a butt cheek .’

‘Yeah, when I went backstage, my manager told me my career is over with.

Old days: 'Those were the days when you shouldn't show your butt to have a career.  Now it's the opposite,' she continued

Old days: ‘Those were the days when you shouldn’t show your butt to have a career. Now it’s the opposite,’ she continued

Accident: The music icon added that it, 'happened by accident and when I didn't even know my butt was showing,' adding, 'it wasn't even like the whole butt it was just like a butt cheek, like half a butt cheek

Accident: The music icon added that it, ‘happened by accident and when I didn’t even know my butt was showing,’ adding, ‘it wasn’t even like the whole butt it was just like a butt cheek, like half a butt cheek

Over: 'Yeah, when I went backstage, my manager told me my career is over with

Over: ‘Yeah, when I went backstage, my manager told me my career is over with

Her new album features all of her 50 #1 hits on the Billboard singles charts, which feature a number of collaborators, though there is one artist she really wants to work with now.

‘I mean, there’s one artist that I worship more than anything and I would love to collaborate with him that’s Kendrick Lamar,’ Madonna said.

She added that his new album, Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers, which was released in May, is, ‘history making’ and ‘mind boggingly brilliant’ and ‘insane.’

New album: Her new album features all of her 50 #1 hits on the Billboard singles charts, which feature a number of collaborators, though there is one artist she really wants to work with now

New album: Her new album features all of her 50 #1 hits on the Billboard singles charts, which feature a number of collaborators, though there is one artist she really wants to work with now

The show opened with Headline Playlist – Madonna Edition, where Fallon found a way to work a number of Madonna song titles into a story about Donald Trump pleading the 5th during his New York deposition.

After the monologue, Fallon revived one of their most popular segments – Classroom Instruments – with Madonna, the first time they’d done so since the COVID-19 pandemic.

Madonna, Fallon and The Roots performed her 2009 song Music with a number of instruments like a triangle, keytar, various shakers, cymbals and more.

Segments: After the monologue, Fallon revived one of their most popular segments - Classroom Instruments - with Madonna, the first time they¿d done so since the COVID-19 pandemic

Segments: After the monologue, Fallon revived one of their most popular segments – Classroom Instruments – with Madonna, the first time they’d done so since the COVID-19 pandemic

Instruments: Madonna, Fallon and The Roots performed her 2009 song Music with a number of instruments like a triangle, keytar, various shakers, cymbals and more

Instruments: Madonna, Fallon and The Roots performed her 2009 song Music with a number of instruments like a triangle, keytar, various shakers, cymbals and more

They were all wearing glow in the dark clothes that lit up when they would intermittently turn the lights off during the performance.

Before they started talking, Madonna ‘corrected’ Fallon by saying she sold over 400 million albums, and telling him she is wearing new grills that she designed herself… and asked him to tell her if she starts lisping.

Fallon asked if she would host the show if he was sick, and she joked that he should ‘take a break for a week.’

Glow up: They were all wearing glow in the dark clothes that lit up when they would intermittently turn the lights off during the performance

Glow up: They were all wearing glow in the dark clothes that lit up when they would intermittently turn the lights off during the performance

Grills: Before they started talking, Madonna ¿corrected¿ Fallon by saying she sold over 400 million albums, and telling him she is wearing new grills that she designed herself¿ and asked him to tell her if she starts lisping

Grills: Before they started talking, Madonna ‘corrected’ Fallon by saying she sold over 400 million albums, and telling him she is wearing new grills that she designed herself… and asked him to tell her if she starts lisping

When she asked the audience if they would like her hosting they all erupted with applause.

He asked what it was like when people started dancing to her music for the first time, she told a story about a club called Danceteria.

‘I want to tell you when I finally got this guy, Mark Kamins, to play my cassette, it’s a song called Everybody,’ she said.

‘It’s on his record and I swear to god, I had to promise everything to him to get it played. And when he played it, everybody got up and started dancing to it and it blew my mind I mean, seriously, like that was everything to me,’ she added.

Host: When she asked the audience if they would like her hosting they all erupted with applause

Host: When she asked the audience if they would like her hosting they all erupted with applause

Dance: He asked what it was like when people started dancing to her music for the first time, she told a story about a club called Danceteria

Dance: He asked what it was like when people started dancing to her music for the first time, she told a story about a club called Danceteria

.

Categories
Sports

PGA Tour 2022, LIV Golf, news, Australian Open, Australian PGA Championship, schedule, dates, Tour of Australasia, Cameron Smith

Australia is set to stage one of its biggest ever seasons of golf, headlined by an $8 million, 16-event tour, starting in October.

PGA of Australia on Thursday confirmed the summer schedule, which has increased from 12 events in 2019-20, and will see the return of the Australian Open.

Bolstering the announcement is the likelihood of big Australian names committing to play on home soil after the pandemic crushed opportunities over the past two summers.

Scroll down for the full schedule!

Watch LIVE coverage from The USPGA Tour with Fox Sports on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

World No.2 Cameron Smith is set to return to play in the Australian Open and Australian PGA Championship, while compatriot Marc Leishman is also expected to feature.

Top-50 player Lucas Herbert has already committed to play both showpiece Australian events, while No.66 Min Woo Lee will feature at the Australian PGA Championship.

LIV Golf, meanwhile, is reportedly eyeing three Australian events as part of its expanded 2023 core schedule, and the International Series it runs with the Asian Tour.

Should those events materialize around April, as reported by Australian Golf Digestit would see the likes of Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka and Phil Mickelson also down under this upcoming season.

Terse Cam refuses to address LIV rumors | 00:43

While the Greg Norman-led series has its detractors due to its Saudi Arabian funding, LIV’s reported venture into Australia will ultimately give golf fans more events, and more international stars, playing for big-money purses on these shores.

Combined with the bumper PGA Tour of Australasia schedule, golf’s Australian presence is set for a significant shot in the arm, while the groundwork has been put in place for more growth in the coming years.

PGA of Australia is committed to increasing the prize money on its tour, this year offering $2 million at the Australian PGA Championship, and $1.7 million each for the men’s and women’s fields at the Australian Open.

Combined with state Opens, state PGAs, The Players Series, and a New Zealand swing, the full season is worth more than $8 million.

READ MORE

How Smith exposed shock sobering truth… and left question that may never be answered

Aussie star Smith drops $140m PGA bombshell as shock Open twist revealed

Why $140m Smith coup could be the ‘tipping’ point in golf’s ugly civil war — World View

LIV Golf makes damning allegations, drags Tiger Woods into spiteful golf feud

Just as significant, however, is the creation of better pathways into Europe and, in turn, the US, through a strengthened partnership with the DP World Tour.

Thursday’s announcement revealed that the top three players in the Order of Merit will earn a DP World Tour playing card for the following season, while the following 10 players gain exemption into at least the second stage of Q-School.

The Australian Open and Australian PGA Championship will both be co-sanctioned by the DP World Tour with the winner also gaining automatic entry to the circuit, while the winner of the Order of Merit earns a spot at next year’s Open Championship.

“What I love about this is the pathways that it creates for our exciting crop of future Australian stars,” PGA of Australia chief Gavin Kirkman said.

“We’ve worked hard to build the schedule back after Covid knocked everyone around in the tournament space, and having the Australian Open and the New Zealand Open back stronger than ever really makes a difference.”

Cam Smith and others set to join LIV | 01:30

Playing fields could improve again next season when the US PGA Tour reverts back to a calendar schedule, instead of the current wraparound program that conflicts with the Australasian Tour.

Furthermore, Kirkman confirmed to reporters that LIV players are allowed to feature on the tour, unlike in Europe and the US where the PGA and DP World Tours have banned dual members.

“The players coming home to play, as long as there’s no conflicting event, they will be welcome to play,” he said. “And the Australian players that come home, and wherever they’re playing at the moment, if they’re members of our organisations, they’ll be eligible to play, and that’s been discussed with the other tours.”

In theory, this would open the door for LIV Golf’s Australian contingent to play several events at home in the coming months, split between the two tours.

That ensures that any defection to LIV Golf, as widely reported, would likely see Smith play more in Australia, not less.

Kirkman, meanwhile, said he hasn’t been approached by LIV about the staging of a tournament next year in Australia.

“We’re hearing things are going on but at the end of the day … if that event comes to Australia we’ll just continue focusing on what we do best and that’s running our tour and servicing Australian golf in the way we feel it should be serviced,” he said.

“We’ll just see what happens there.

“If it comes to Australia, we’ve got to be in a position to stay focused on our strategy. If it fits in, it fits in, but we will talk closely to Golf Australia and the WPGA Tour and work on what we need to keep working on.”

PGA TOUR OF AUSTRALASIA FULL 2022-23 SCHEDULE

October 10-16 — CKB WA PGA, Kalgoorlie Golf Club — $200,000

October 17-23 — WA Open, West Australian Golf Club — $162,500

November 7-13—VIC PGA, Moonah Links Resort—$200,000

November 14-20—Queensland PGA, Nudgee Golf Club—$200,000

November 21-28 — Fortinet Australian PGA Championship, Royal Queensland Golf Club — $2,000,000

November 29-December 4 — ISPS HANDA Australian Open, Victoria Golf Club and Kingston Heath Golf Club — $1,700,000

December 5-11 — Gippsland Super 6, Warragul Country Club — $175,000

January 23-29—TPS Victoria, Rosebud Country Club—$200,000

Jan 30-Feb 5 — TPS Murray River, Cobram-Barooga Golf Club — $200,000

TBA February—VIC Open, TBA—TBA

February 13-19 — TPS Sydney, Bonnie Doon Golf Club — $200,000

February 20-26—TPS Hunter Valley, Oaks Cypress Lakes Resort—$200,000

February 27-March 5—NZ Open, Millbrook Resort—$1,400,000

March 6-12 — NZ PGA Championship Auckland — $150,000

13-19 March—Play Today NSW Open TBA—$400,000

Late March – Season Finale TBA TBA — $200,000

.

Categories
US

After the fall of Roe, Republican pursuit of abortion bans appears to falter | Roe v. Wade

YoIn the leadup to the US supreme court overturning Roe v Wade and thus scrapping federal abortion protection, Republican lawmakers across the country maintained an uncompromising rallying cry against abortions, vowing to implement a sweeping wave of restrictions in their states.

However, since the highest court in the US overturned the ruling, many Republican leaders and officials have become more hesitant – or have even gone silent – ​​over the exact type of bans they promised to enact.

As Republicans move towards an election season rife with internal disagreements within their own party and mixed public opinions on exceptions in abortion bans such as instances of rape and incest, many rightwing lawmakers are finding it increasingly difficult to implement cohesive abortion policies.

The phenomenon has been starkly illustrated by Kansas’s referendum last week, where the usually reliably Republican state voted to keep abortion protections in its state constitution, providing an unexpected boost from red state America to the abortion rights movement.

With delays in passing abortion bills across the US and contentious questions on how far the bans will reach, Republicans are now, as Sarah Longwell, a moderate Republican strategist, said to Politico, “the dog that caught the car.”

According to a survey conducted between 27 June and 4 July by the Pew Research center, a majority of the American public disapproves of the supreme court’s decision to overturn Roe: 57% of adults disapprove of the court’s decision, including 43% who strongly disapprove, and 41% of American adults approve while 25% strongly approve of the court’s decision.

The survey also found that 62% of Americans say that abortion should be legal in all or most cases, and 36% of Americans say that abortion should be illegal in all or most cases. Only 38% of Republicans say that abortion should be legal in all or most cases, marking a 1% decrease from poll results obtained in 2007.

As Republican lawmakers grapple with mixed public opinions, many lawmakers have been divided over just how far they should go to ban abortions. With the recent case of the 10-year-old rape victim traveling across state lines from Ohio to Indiana to obtain an abortion continuing to dominate national headlines, many Republicans are realizing that the reality they are presented with vastly differs from their initial narratives surrounding abortion politics.

What kind of exceptions should be made in cases of rape and incest? Should a woman be granted an abortion if she is faced with a life-threatening ectopic pregnancy or an incomplete miscarriage? If an outright ban is put in place, should there be expansions of paid family leave benefits and increased funding for foster care and women’s health?

Some states have plowed ahead. Indiana has now passed a Republican-sponsored bill that would ban nearly all abortions in the state with limited exceptions, including cases of rape and incest, and to protect the health of the mother. That made it the first state in the US to put new restrictions in place, rather than just rely on a pre-existing “trigger law” passed before the supreme court’s decision.

But even in Indiana the move came after a series of thorny debates in the Indiana congress that reflect the growing divide Republicans are facing when it comes to fleshing out the specifics of abortion ban bills.

Before Roe v Wade was overturned, lawmakers did not spend “enough time on those issues, because you knew it was an issue you didn’t have to really get into the granular level in. But we’re in there and we’re recognizing that this is pretty hard work,” Republican Indiana state senator Rodric Bray told the New York Times.

Another Indiana Republican state senator, Kyle Walker, who voted against the ban last month, said: “I believe we must strike a balance for pregnant women to make their own health decisions in the first trimester of the pregnancy and also provide protections for an unborn baby as it progresses toward viability outside the womb.”

Even state senator Sue Glick, the sponsor of the bill, said that she was “not exactly” happy with the bill.

Meanwhile, the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana called the bill “cruel” and “dangerous”, while Indiana Right to Life criticized it as being “weak and troubling”, saying that it “lacks any teeth to actually reduce abortions in Indiana by holding those who perform abortions or would intentionally skirt the law accountable with criminal consequences.”

South Dakota, a predominantly Republican state, is facing a similar situation.

Shortly after the bombshell leak of the supreme court draft opinion on Roe, Republican governor Kristi Noem announced that she will “immediately call for a special session to save lives and guarantee that every unborn child has a right to life in South Dakota.”

However, since the supreme court overturned Roe, Noem has yet to publicly give any indication of when or if a special session will still take place. In response to the Associated Press asking if the special legislative session is still on the table, Noem’s office said it will happen “later this year”.

Noem has largely kept her language surrounding South Dakota’s abortion bans vague, simply reaffirming that “there is more work to do” and promising to “help mothers in crisis”. In June, Noem appeared to soften her approach on abortions by saying that doctors, not their patients, should be prosecuted for offering abortion pills.

“I don’t believe women should ever be prosecuted,” she said. “I don’t believe there should be any punishment for women, ever, that are in a crisis situation or have an unplanned pregnancy,” she said. The governor also set up a website for pregnant women that aims to “help mothers and their babies before birth and after by providing resources for pregnancy, new parents, financial assistance and adoption.”

Speaking to the Associated Press, South Dakota Right to Life’s executive director, Dale Bartscher, said that Noem’s actions reflect a turning point in the anti-abortion movement.

“An entirely new pro-life movement has just begun – we stand ready to serve women, the unborn and families,” he said. The Guardian reached out to Bartscher for additional comments.

In Arkansas, the Republican governor, Asa Hutchinson, appears to have taken a softer approach on the issue after the state’s abortion trigger ban immediately went into effect when Roe was overturned. Last month, Hutchinson did not confirm that abortion will be a topic on the agenda of this month’s special session that is supposed to focus on tax cuts.

Referring to alternatives to abortion, Hutchinson said: “That’s come up in conversations … I’ve mentioned that I need. You know, what can we do more for maternity care? What can we do more for adoption services because of the increased number that’s going to be demanding that? And so that is a potential issue… so just stay tuned.”

In May, Hutchinson acknowledged that his state’s abortion trigger law would result in “heartbreaking circumstances”, adding that “whenever you see that real-life circumstances like that, the debate is going to continue and the will of the people may or may not change. ”.

The governor admitted that abortions performed in the exceptions of rape and incest are increasingly “reflecting the broad view of Americans” but acknowledged that the issue is “still a very divided [topic].”

However, whether Hutchinson will ask lawmakers to consider the exceptions during the state’s upcoming legislative special session remains to be seen.

Meanwhile, in Ohio, the Republican governor, Mike DeWine, has refused to comment on the state’s recently enacted “heartbeat bill”, which makes abortions illegal after six weeks into a pregnancy. As a result of the state’s strict abortion laws, a 10-year-old rape victim from the state had to travel to Indiana to receive an abortion.

DeWine condemned the case as a “horrible, horrible tragedy” but did not signal whether he would amend abortion restrictions in the state. Speaking to reporters last month, DeWine refused to advocate for specific abortion policies and said that he is “going to let the debate play out a little bit”, referring to the legislative debate that is expected to happen in a few months.

“We’re going to hear from medical experts, we’re going to hear from other people,” he said, adding: “then there’ll be a time when I’ll certainly weigh in.”

Since Roe got overturned, Virginia’s top Republican lawmaker has been expressing similar sentiments to DeWine’s. In June, Governor Glenn Youngkin told an anti-abortion group that he would “happily and gleefully” sign any bill that would protect life, which he believes begins at conception.

Youngkin has expressed support for a ban on abortions after 15 weeks with exceptions for rape, incest and risk to the mother’s health.

Youngkin did not specify his support for any particular policies, although he acknowledged the divisive nature of the issue and called for a legislative process to hash out nuances in abortion ban bills.

“I’m a pro-life governor and I will sign a bill that comes to my desk that protects life and I look forward to that. But as of now, what we need is the process to start and to take the next four or five or six months and to work on a bill that can be supported on a bipartisan basis,” he said.

As Republicans across the country face a widening divide over the particularities of implementing abortion bans, a leading anti-abortion group has been urging Republicans in Congress not to leave the issue to the states. Many anti-abortion activists worry that extreme measures by Republican state lawmakers may cost Republican lawmakers seats nationally, especially with midterms on the horizon.

At the same time, in the wake of the Kansas referendum result, many Democratic strategists now believe public opinion, even in many red states, will be on their side. The issue can be used to shore up under-threat Democrats and wielded as a weapon against Republican candidates who can be portrayed as out of step with most Americans.

In a memo from Susan B Anthony Pro-Life America sent out in July, Republican lawmakers were encouraged to stay away from phrases such as “nationwide ban” and were urged not to relay the issue to state lawmakers.

“It is vitally important that pro-life Members of Congress highlight the abortion extremism of Democrats, who support abortion on demand, up until the moment of birth, paid for the taxpayer,” the memo said.

Categories
Business

Peaking Inflation Best News Ever for Equity Investors



















The equity markets have been having a dream run this week. BSE Sensex is up by almost 1.3 per cent in the past one week. Since the recent bottom made in mid-June this year, the markets have recovered by about 16 per cent. This phenomenal recovery, although an unexpected one given the headwinds, has taken most investors by surprise. It is quite possible that many investors have been caught on the wrong foot in this rally. The current setup looks promising with participation seen across sectors and market capitalisation. This participation in the market is likely to get wider if the uptrend continues going forward.


The participation of FIIs has been a key highlight in recent weeks with continuous buying seen in sectors like FMCG, financials and realty stocks. FIIs have been reducing stakes in IT and metal stocks recently. With three in every four Nifty 50 stocks trading over 200 days’ SMA, the overall trend in the market is bullish as of now. This week we have seen some extraordinary performances from small-cap and SME stocks. From the SME pack we have seen shares such as Gensol Engineering, Kotyark Industries and Inflame Appliances making lifetime highs for themselves. From the small-cap space we have seen quality names such as Raj Ratan Global Wires, Tube Investments, JK Papers, Mirza International and CG Power make fresh 52-week highs.


The outperformance of some basic material stocks like TGV SRAAC, Sree Rayalaseema and Grindwell Norton was the highlight during this week. From the large-cap space, we have seen the Adani Group stocks continue the positive trend from the previous week. Adani Enterprises and Adani Power, in particular, are witnessing a tremendous bull run supported by good volumes. Hindustan Aeronautics and ICICI Bank made fresh 52-week highs in Thursday’s trading session, thus indicating positive momentum. With several stocks attempting fresh highs and the breadth improving, it is easy to get carried away in such a market environment.


The focus clearly is on financials as momentum gathers pace in the sector. Investors should avoid taking any leveraged bets even as the global equity market sentiment improves. India VIX cooling off by about 6 per cent during Thursday’s trading session could impart some confidence to the bulls. However, cautious optimism is the key to success in this market. This week we have seen Nifty break key resistance of 17,500 with ease and 17,800 is clearly on the cards. For the next week momentum traders and investors will have to keep a close eye on the 17,500 levels in Nifty, which shall act as immediate support and 17,716 levels for resistance.


As financials are in focus, Bank Nifty will be in the limelight as well. The key support levels for Bank Nifty are 38,400 and the strong resistance in the coming five trading sessions will be 39,400. The momentum was slightly in favor of the large-caps in Thursday’s trading session but the broader markets may throw a surprise party in the coming week. It is the expectation of inflation peaking out that is creating a wave of bullishness in the equity markets. Keep an eye on what is happening in the US market to better understand the market sentiment!




























Categories
Technology

Tower of Fantasy – All Black and Gold Nucleus locations on Astra

Tower of Fantasy has a unique summoning system, in that you can find tokens (or Nuclei) to summon simply by exploring the world. There are two types of Nuclei—Black and Gold. Black Nucleus allows you to spin the Black Nucleus Cache, while Gold Nucleus allow you to spin the Gold Nucleus Cache gachas. Red Nucleus are very rare indeed, but allow you to spin the specialty gacha.

Black Nucleus is a lot more common to come across than Gold, and Gold is more common than Red — it’s not possible to find Red Nucleus out in the overworld. Black and Gold, however, can be found by simply exploring the land. Astra, your starting island, is chock full of locations to find these Nuclei. Here are all of the Black and Gold Nucleus locations on Astra for Tower of Fantasy.

We’ve broken the starting island up into two halves. Each star marks a Nucleus location. It’s random if you will get Black or Gold from interactable locations, such as Tar Pits or Kerosene Plants. However, there are set Gold Nucleus spawns, typically in the middle of Strongholds or hidden in tough-to-reach locations.

You can also gather Nuclei from Caches scattered around the island, so always make a trip if you see one in the distance. Purple Caches (or Type 1) will grant Black Nucleus, while Gold Caches (or Type 2) will grant Gold Nucleus, in addition to some Dark Crystal as well. 1500 Dark Crystal gets you 10 spins on the Red Nucleus Gacha, so make sure you save up for that.

We recommend always carrying a flame weapon with you, such as the starting bow you receive, to more rapidly gather from certain locations. Keep in mind that some locations require time to pass before they will activate, so it’s impossible to gather everything from the get-go. Furthermore, this map isn’t comprehensive — with so many locations, it’s possible we missed a few.

Written by Junior Miyai on behalf of GLHF.

.

Categories
Sports

All Blacks named for Ellis Park clash » allblacks.com

All Blacks head coach Ian Foster has named his side for the second Lipovitan-D Rugby Championship Test against South Africa at Ellis Park Stadium.

Uncapped tighthead prop Fletcher Newell has been introduced to the match-day 23 as front row cover, while props Ethan de Groot and Tyrel Lomax have been named in the run-on side. They are joined by hooker Samisoni Taukeiaho, while 69-Test veteran Codie Taylor returns to the match-day 23 as cover.

Blindside flanker Shannon Frizell has also been moved into the run-on side after being used as an impact player during the first Test in Mbombela, marking his 14th appearance in the number six jersey. In the back row, he is joined by Ardie Savea and captain Sam Cane who will surpass Jerome Kaino (81) as the third-most capped All Black loose forward in Tests.

The only change made to the backline is at first-five eighths. Richie Mo’unga will run out in the number 10 jersey for the first time this season, as he closes in on Carlos Spencer (291) for sixth place on the All Blacks’ all-time points-scoring list.

“Belief and confidence remain high in our group, which is working incredibly hard this week,” said Foster. “Playing at Ellis Park is always a special occasion for any All Black team, and this weekend will be no different.

“Adding to that, the Freedom Cup is on the line which makes this a challenge that everyone is looking forward to.”

All Blacks match-day 23 (Test caps in brackets):

1. Ethan de Groot (5)

2. Samisoni Taukei’aho (12)

3.Tyrel Lomax (15)

4. Samuel Whitelock (135)

5. Scott Barrett (51)

6. Shannon Frizell (18)

7. Sam Cane © (81)

8. Ardie Savea (63)

9. Aaron Smith (106)

10. Richie Mounga (36)

11. Caleb Clarke (6)

12. David Havili (17)

13. Rieko Ioane (51)

14. Will Jordan (16)

15. Jordie Barrett (40)

16.Codie Taylor (69)

17. George Bower (15)

18. Fletcher Newell*

19. Tupou Vaa’i (13)

20. Akira Ioane (15)

21. Finlay Christie (7)

22. Beauden-Barrett (105)

23. Quinn Tupaea (10)

*Debut