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US

As Shootings Soar in Philadelphia, City is Awash in Guns

PHILADELPHIA — The 300th killing of the year took the life of Lameer Boyd, an 18-year-old father-to-be who was gunned down one July night on a West Philadelphia sidewalk. Over the days that followed, a grandmother was shot in the neck in Mill Creek, a popular singer was killed in front of his house in South Philadelphia and a 26-year-old was shot during an argument outside a restaurant in East Tioga .

On Aug. 2, a Tuesday night, a car pulled up at a front-porch cookout in Northeast Philadelphia. Someone in the car opened fire, killing a 29-year-old woman.

With her death, the 322nd of the year, the number of homicides in Philadelphia was on track toward becoming the highest in police records, passing the bleak milestone set just last year. So far in 2022, more than 1,400 people in the city have been shot, hundreds of them fatally, a higher toll than in the much larger cities of New York or Los Angeles. Alarms have sounded about gun violence across the country over the past two years, but Philadelphia is one of the few major American cities where it truly is as bad as it has ever been.

The crisis is all the more harrowing for having been so concentrated in certain neighborhoods in North and West Philadelphia, places that were left behind decades ago by redlining and other forms of discrimination and are now among the poorest parts of what is often called the country’s poorest big city. Violence has erupted at times in other areas of Philadelphia, including a mass shooting in June on a packed street with bar and restaurant traffic. But much of the gunfire has rung out on blocks of blighted rowhouses, vacant lots and iron-caged front porches.

The city government has rolled out an array of efforts to address the crisis, including grants for community groups, violence intervention programs and earlier curfews. But on one crucial matter, there seem to be no ready answers: what to do about all the guns.

“Everybody is armed,” said Jonathan Wilson, director of the Fathership Foundation, a nonprofit organization in Southwest Philadelphia that has been helping to conduct a multicity survey of young people’s attitudes about gun culture. “Nobody’s without a gun in these ZIP codes, because they’ve always been dangerous.”

In a recent news conference, Mayor Jim Kenney lamented that the authorities “keep taking guns off the street, and they’re simultaneously replaced almost immediately.” In fact, the problem is more drastic than that, according to a city report earlier this year. For every illegal gun seized by the police in Philadelphia between 1999 and 2019, about three more guns were bought or sold legally — and that was before a recent boom in gun ownership.

In Philadelphia over the past two years, as all around the country, the pace of legal gun sales surged, roughly doubling during the pandemic years. The number of firearm licenses issued in the city jumped to more than 52,000 in 2021, from around 7,400 in 2020.

None of these figures include the apparently flourishing market in illegal guns. Over the past two years, reports of stolen guns have spiked, major gun-trafficking pipelines have been uncovered and, according to the police, many more guns have been found that were illegally converted into fully automatic weapons.

The city has sued the gun-friendly state legislature for pre-empting its authority to enact stronger local gun laws, like reporting requirements for lost or stolen guns. And officials in Philadelphia have publicly quarreled among themselves about enforcement of the laws on the books. In July, after two police officers were shot at a Fourth of July celebration, some City Council leaders even suggested returning to a police tactic that many people had come to see as the shame of an earlier era: stop-and-frisk.

“There are a lot of citizens in the streets of the city of Philadelphia that talk about, ‘When are we going to look at stop-and-frisk in a constitutional and active way?’” Darrell L. Clarke, the council president, said at a news conference. “Those are conversations that people have to have.”

Given a consent decree that requires the monitoring of police stops, as well as opposition from other city leaders and a dearth of evidence that the practice ever worked, the old days of stop-and-frisk, when the police conducted thousands of street searches that overwhelmingly targeted Black Philadelphians, are unlikely to return. But broaching the subject at all revealed the depths of official exasperation.

Some of the frustration has been directed at the district attorney, Larry Krasner, whose approach to criminal justice has drawn criticism from the mayor, ire from the police union and a threat of impeachment from Republican state lawmakers.

Mr. Krasner, one of the most prominent progressive prosecutors in the country, has long argued that putting a major focus on the arrest and incarceration of people caught carrying firearms without a permit is not only ineffectual but counterproductive, because it diverts police energy and resources from solving violent crime and alienates people whom investigators need as sources and witnesses.

“You can make massive numbers of gun arrests, and you do not see significant reductions in shooting,” he said in an interview.

There were no arrests in three quarters of last year’s fatal shootings, according to statistics provided by Mr. Krasner’s office, even as arrests for illegal guns soared to record levels.

Only a small fraction of the people who are arrested for carrying guns without permits are the ones actually driving the violence, Mr. Krasner said. He insisted that the city needed to focus instead on people who had already proven themselves to be dangerous, and to invest in advanced forensic technology to clear the hundreds of unsolved shootings.

“What is their theory — that rather than go vigorously after the people who actually shoot the gun,” Mr. Krasner asked, “that we should take 100 people and put them in jail, because one of them might shoot somebody?

Some city officials, including the police chief, see things differently.

“I think there are some philosophical differences between us,” said Police Commissioner Danielle M. Outlaw in an interview. She said she advocated “a both-andnot yet either-or”approach. Earlier this year, the police created a special unit dedicated to investigating nonfatal shootings, with four dozen detectives and other officers working on cases across the city. But the commissioner insisted that the police were just as committed to cracking down on illegal gun possession as well.

“There have to be consequences for those who are carrying and using these guns illegally,” Ms. Outlaw said. “If I go out and get this gun, knowing nothing’s going to happen to me, why would that prevent me from doing anything else illegally with a gun?”

For those who live in the crisis every day, these questions are visceral.

Marguerite Ruff is a special education classroom assistant at an elementary school in Philadelphia. On a Saturday morning seven years ago, her youngest son, Justin, 23, was shot to death in the street.

There should be stiffer penalties for carrying guns illegally, Ms Ruff said in a recent interview. But she added that it probably wouldn’t make any difference. “They think they can get away with it, because they’re young,” she said.

Some years ago, “a thinking person” would not carry a gun on the streets of Philadelphia, Ms. Ruff said, “but now you can’t even step out of your house, can’t go to your car, you can’ t drive to the corner.” She did not like that so many people carried guns, she said, but “in a way, I can understand it.”

At the North Philadelphia headquarters of NOMO, a nonprofit for at-risk youth in the city, a few dozen young people — boys and girls, 11 to 17 — had gathered on a sweltering summer afternoon. Rickey Duncan, the organization’s chief executive, asked for a show of hands: How many felt endangered on a daily basis? A large majority raised a hand. How many would feel safer with a gun? The response was about the same.

How many knew how to get a gun with a single phone call? The response was nearly unanimous.

One young man explained it this way: If you were arrested, you could still see your family in jail. Not so if you were dead.

Mr. Duncan had called this man, a 21-year-old participant in the program who did not want his name published for his own safety, and asked him to tell his story.

Several years ago, the young man said, he bought a 9 millimeter pistol from an acquaintance for several hundred dollars, only to have another friend take it, fire it at him and leave with it. That friend was later charged with shooting two people to death. This is how it is these days, he said.

“We still want to do better,” he said. “But there’s a lot of things in the way.”

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Business

Bunnings apron mystery dividing Australian TikTok fans solved

A heated debate has erupted online about the proper purpose of one particular detail on the infamous Bunnings aprons.

The saga began after TikTok user Luke Donkin questioned the use of the clear pockets at the front of the bottle green apron, speaking a frenzy of different answers.

The Australian comedian makes humorous skits pretending to be an employee of different department stores.

“I honestly have no idea what this pocket is used for,” he said.

“I’ve always wanted to put like a trail mix in it and then just [pretends to eat it] throughout the day.

“But I’d probably get in trouble.”

His followers were quick to give their different answers for the purpose of the clear pocket, with most agreeing it was to display a name badge.

“It’s for a name badge!” said one.

“But the trail mix thing is a great idea.”

“It has to be for the name badge doesn’t it?” dear one.

“I literally don’t see any other option.”

But these theories have now been blown out of the water as another TikTok user who says she is a real Bunnings worker makes another bold claim.

“Okay TikTok, here is what the Bunnings pouch is really for” she said.

“Name badge yes, but we have a notepad for every store.”

In the video, the worker removes a green Bunnings notepad from the hidden compartment that sits behind the first one, splitting the pocket into two.

The comment section of the video then added another mystery into the mix that is leaving people baffled.

A TikTok user who claimed to also work at Bunnings said that their apron actually had three pockets.
A spokesperson for Bunnings Warehouse confirmed that the pocket can be used for these purposes.

“We can confirm on background that the clear pocket is used for a name tag” they said.

“But some team also keep notepads in there as well.”

Read related topics:Bunnings

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Entertainment

Love Island UK 2022 reunion: Luca Bish admits he’s finally met Gemma Owen’s famous soccer star dad Michael Owen over FaceTime

Love IslandUK star Luca Bish has finally met Gemma Owen’s famous soccer star father Michael “over FaceTime” after the pair came second during the show’s finale.

The fishmonger revealed the news during the show’s highly-anticipated reunion this month, when asked by host Laura Whitmore if he’d come face-to-face with the athlete.

“I know you’ve met her mum, have you met her dad yet?” Laura asked, referring to her meeting de ella with Gemma’s mother Louise during the Meet the Parents episode last month.

Stream every episode ever of Love IslandUK and Love Island Australia for free on 9Now.

Luca replied: “Not yet, we’ve had a little FaceTime together and that’s it!”

Laura then joked with Luca about the comparisons between himself and Michael, jesting: “Was it like looking at yourself in the future?”

Gemma Owen Luca Bish Love Island UK 2022 Reunion.
Gemma and Luca talked about their relationship and family on the Love Island UK 2022 Reunion. (9Now)

But this didn’t go down too well with Gemma, who said she was repulsed by anyone saying there was a resemblance.

READMORE: Ekin-Su Cülcüloğlu and Davide Sanclimenti win Love Island UK 2022

“I can’t see it at all, do you know?” she said, burying her head in her hands. “…And it actually makes me feel a little bit sick thinking about it as well.”

During the famous Meet the Parents segment on this show, Gemma’s mum Louise told her that Luca looked like a younger version of the ex-England striker.

Laura went on to laugh: “They say that we all have that complex where you go for one of your parents!”

Michael Owen is an English ex-professional footballer who played as a striker for Liverpool, Real Madrid, Newcastle United, Manchester United and Stoke City.

He also played for the English national team.

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(Nine)

Michael’s name was barely mentioned during the season, but Gemma did briefly bring up her dad during a chat with Luca at the start of the season.

“Who do you feel like your family would get on best with out of all the boys in here?” Luca asked her.

Love Island Gemma Owen Michael Owen Dad
Michael Owen is pictured with his daughter Gemma (Instagram)

She replied, “You. Because you’re sporty and you’re into football and into racing. I think my dad would have stuff in common with you.”

“Would your dad and me go out and do things together?” Lucas replied. “Or does he not get close?”

READMORE: Love Island UK’s Alex and Olivia Bowen reveal why they won’t show their newborn son’s face on social media

Gemma responded, “He was quite close with my first boyfriend and I think he appreciates a guy who is into sports and all that kind of stuff.

“So I heard you like talking about football and racing and all that, so I’m like, hmm.”

Luca replied, “I enjoy playing football. I know what I’m talking about with football as well. Let’s see if he knows what he’s talking about.”

Ekin-Su Cülcüloğlu and Davide Sanclimenti were crowned the winners of Love IslandUK this year, with Gemma and Luca coming in second place.

Meanwhile, Indiyah Polack and Dami Hope came in third place, while Tasha Ghouri and Andrew Le Page finished fourth.

In Pictures

Love Island UK 2022 Tasha Ghouri Andrew Le Page

Which Love Island UK Couples are still together in 2022?

Deaf Islander’s heartwarming message.

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Stream every episode ever of Love IslandUK and Love Island Australia for free on 9Now.

Categories
Australia

Bonuses, cheaper degrees on agenda ahead of meeting of state education ministers to address teacher shortages

Peace said retaining teachers was just as essential to meeting workforce demands as attracting new teachers into the profession. The union is calling on the government to offer teachers financial incentives for remaining, just as it has paid incentive bonuses of up to $50,000 for teachers who move to short-staffed schools.

“We’ve got to look at some way the government can provide an incentive to get people to consider staying,” she said. “For us, it’s about recognition of the work that they have put in, particularly after the last two years.”

Education ministers will call on the Albanese government to increase funding to innovative teacher training programs such as Teach for Australia, and La Trobe University’s Nexus program.

Students of these programs must already hold a university degree, and can gain a teaching qualification within 18 months, while working in a school for as many as four days a week and being paid as part of their studies.

Vern Hilditch, executive principal of Wodonga Senior Secondary College in Victoria’s north-east, said his school was increasingly reliant on Nexus graduates to fill teaching positions.

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He said it had been difficult for some years to attract enough high-quality teachers to regional and rural schools and the problem had become much worse recently.

The college had advertised nine permanent and fixed-term teaching roles for next year, but had received just one applicant, Hilditch said.

“Without a program such as Nexus, we just don’t have a chance of competing to … attract people into education, particularly for trade teachers,” he said.

A paper put together by the Victorian and NSW governments says the Commonwealth has committed to “funding incentives for high-performing school-leavers, First Nations students, and rural and regional students to gain a teaching degree. This commitment could be extended to include reduced contributions for teaching degrees.”

Federal Education Minister Jason Clare released an issues paper this week on the “unprecedented teacher supply and retention challenges” in schools.

Australia faces an imminent shortage of about 4,100 secondary school teachers as enrollments grow and entries into teaching courses decline, the paper warns.

The number of students in Australia schools is forecast to grow by more than 10 per cent in the next decade, but university enrollments into initial teacher education courses declined by 8 per cent between 2017 and 2020.

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Former secondary school teacher Stephanie Wescott taught English and humanities for five years, but quit the profession in 2019 in frustration at what she felt was a data-driven system that added hours of administration to her weekly workload, and took away her autonomy.

“Current policies in Victoria are stringent about what good teaching looks like, and it often means teachers have less freedom to teach in ways they would like to,” she said.

Wescott, now a PhD candidate at Monash University’s faculty of education, said more than half of her teacher friends were considering leaving the profession.

“They’re exhausted, and they don’t see the change that they want to see. They don’t feel like their work is particularly valued,” she said.

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Negative public perceptions of teachers, stagnant pay rates and punishing workloads were all problems that must be addressed to retain teachers, Wescott said.

“It’s OK to do a difficult job if you feel like your work is being held in high esteem and you feel valued and appreciated, but when the conversation around teaching tends to be disparaging that really complicates people’s decision-making on whether they want to enter the profession or not.”

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US

Pro-Trump backlash to FBI search fuels concern over political violence

The stunning FBI search of former President Trump’s Florida residence this week has inspired a fierce backlash on the right, fueling concern among experts about the escalating risk of political violence.

The response among Trump supporters has ranged from sharp criticism over the Justice Department’s tactics to outright incendiary rhetoric, with Trump himself comparing the search of his home to the Nixon-era burglary of the Watergate complex.

Some of Trump’s most fervent backers described this week’s legal development as reflecting a country in the midst of civil war, and in isolated cases some far-right extremists called for mobilization in response to what was depicted as an act of tyranny by lawless federal agents.

Although the FBI’s search was based on a warrant approved by a federal judge, that did not stop Republicans from claiming the probe rose from a desire to harm President Biden’s main rival rather than potentially criminal conduct linked to Trump.

“The GOP’s choice to turn a probe into the mishandling of classified documents into a cause célèbre is dangerous, particularly given Trump’s history of calling on private violence, mobs, and militias for support,” said Rachel Kleinfeld, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “A democracy cannot allow anyone to be above the law.”

It may be unsurprising that a criminal investigation linked to Trump, the de facto Republican Party leader and a possible 2024 contender, would spark an impassioned response. At the same time, even the most provocative political speech, short of an incitement to violence, enjoys broad protections under the First Amendment.

But outrage over the FBI search of Trump’s home comes at a particularly tense moment in American politics, as the share of partisans who think violence is sometimes justified to achieve political ends has grown significantly. According to researcher Nathan Kalmoe, around one in five partisans say violence by their own party is at least a little justified to advance their goals.

“More partisan violence looks likely in the future, especially in response to particularly tense moments like the one Trump has escalated here,” said Kalmoe, a professor at Louisiana State University who has tracked the rising support for political violence.

In the immediate aftermath of the FBI search at Mar-a-Lago, a swift backlash arose from a chorus of voices across the right.

Experts said that a specific, concerted plan for real world action hasn’t emerged, but warned that officials should keep a close eye on the tense online vitriol.

One prominent alt-right figure, Jack Posobiec, posted a series of inflammatory posts this week on Telegram, including one with more than 62,000 views that the “federal security state has declared war on Donald J Trump and his supporters.”

According to Alyssa Kann, a research associate at the Digital Forensic Research Lab, some of Posobiec’s messages have been posted in domestic extremist channels, where users are also talking about taking up arms, mobilizing and targeting the FBI.

The incendiary posts haven’t been contained to fringe sites. Posobiec, who has 1.8 million followers on Twitter, tweeted Wednesday that “Our government has been taken over by a Deranged Eunuch Class. It is up to us to displace them and dismantle their corrupt apparatus.”

Steven Crowder, a conservative commentator with 1.9 million Twitter followers, tweeted Monday night “Tomorrow is war. Sleep well.”

Twitter has not taken action on those posts or the accounts. A spokesperson for the company did not respond to a request for comment.

The violent rhetoric is spreading across alternative social media sites too, such as Gab, Parler, Getter, which boast little to no content moderation policies and attract right wing audiences — especially users banned from the mainstream sites.

Collectively, the posts that have emerged online, across platforms, highlight a “nice little shopping list of far-right narratives,” said Jared Holt, senior research manager at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD).

“It’s like a big firehose of incendiary content that has kind of blown back towards the news item in these spaces,” he said.

Even as the rhetoric has grown more intense, the distance from the political fringe to the political mainstream has shortened.

According to Kann, inflammatory rhetoric that once may have been confined to fringe sites and from far-right figures has been embraced even by politicians with large followings on mainstream platforms like Twitter and Facebook, a dynamic which “emboldens” far-right influencers to be “even more violent,” she said.

“It also mainstreams that sort of violent rhetoric to the everyday person, which is really scary to think about,” Kann said.

Outspoken far-right lawmaker Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s (R-Ga.) tweets have added to the right-wing chorus, with the political firebrand calling to “defund” the FBI, casting the raid as “tyrannical” and likening the situation to action in a “civil war.”

Shannon Hiller, executive director of Princeton’s nonpartisan Bridging Divides Initiative, which seeks to track and mitigate political violence, said American politics was in a “sensitive moment,” one that called for leaders to tamp down tensions, not heighten them.

She pointed to Govs. Larry Hogan of Maryland and Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas as examples of Republican leaders who, though critical of DOJ’s lack of transparency, had expressed their views without further inflaming political discourse, unlike some of their GOP colleagues.

“I do think that other GOP leaders who wink and nod to extremist rhetoric are playing with fire,” she said. “We know from other research that leaders calling for calm and rejecting violence has a positive effect on reducing risk, that’s what we should be calling for from all our leaders now.”

Trump, for his part, has continued to use his megaphone to ratchet up the temperature. On Wednesday, the former president suggested, without evidence, that federal agents had planted evidence on his property, again depicting himself as the victim of a shadowy “raid.”

Legal experts refuted Trump’s depiction of the FBI operation, and underscored the stakes of the investigation — as well as the backlash.

“Even though a judge issued the search warrant for Trump’s home, which requires a finding of probable cause that a crime was committed and that evidence would be found on the premises, Trump and his supporters are going on the offensive and engaging in heated rhetoric that DOJ has somehow treated Trump improperly,” said Barbara McQuade, a law professor at the University of Michigan, who spent seven years as a federal prosecutor during Barack Obama’s presidency. “It is amazing to me how many people are willing to take the bait.”

“I think the risk of civil unrest is very real, but DOJ cannot let that fear prevent it from enforcing the law,” she added, calling the Jan. 6 attack a “sovering” reminder not to underestimate “the threat of political violence by those who support Donald Trump.”

Experts noted a key difference between online posts ahead of the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol and fallout from the FBI’s search for Mar-a-Lago. While the run-up to the Jan. 6 attack saw the emergence of a specific plan, posts circulating online this week have lacked the same concerted tie to a specific time and place.

At least not yet, said Holt, of ISD, who added that the security situation would continue to be closely monitored.

“We’re starting to track some calls for protests, we’ve seen a couple kind of floated around, but nothing’s really centralizing at this point,” he said. “There have been at least a couple instances where this has inspired extremists to call for protests or call for mobilization. We’re going to keep an eye on that and see how that evolves.”

Categories
Entertainment

Australian Chamber Orchestra debuts ‘confronting’ The Crowd and I show

‘Confronting and ‘extremely traumatic’ show touring around Australia leaves people lost for words as some admit they wish they could’ve WALKED OUT

  • Australian Chamber Orchestra’s ‘The Crowd & I’ leaves viewers ‘traumatised’
  • It is a cinematic and musical exploration of humanity’s ever-evolving existence
  • The eye-opening performance took ten years to perfect and is touring Australia
  • Many viewers commented saying it would take a while to process what they saw

A new show touring around Australia is leaving its attendees ‘traumatized’ and ‘devastated’ with some saying the performance stuck with them for days and others wishing they could’ve walked out halfway through.

The Australian Chamber Orchestra’s new production ‘The Crowd & I’ has received mixed reactions from viewers with people leaving in tears over the heavy show.

The performance, which was more than ten years in the making, pairs orchestra performance with vision from the banks of the Ganges to the mosh pits of Coachella, sprawling refugee camps and ever-expanding metropolises.

The show is described as ‘humanity moving in swarms across the globe in ever vaster numbers, to celebrate, worship, protest, destroy and build a new’.

Australian Chamber Orchestra's 'The Crowd & I' received mixed reactions after viewers were left 'traumatised' from the experience

Australian Chamber Orchestra’s ‘The Crowd & I’ received mixed reactions after viewers were left ‘traumatised’ from the experience

The show encourages attendees to discover new ways in which people have come to live with one another, crowded together and separated from nature.

People who saw the show took to social media admitting they were lost for words.

‘This was an extremely traumatic experience for me. How can anyone enjoy witnessing man’s inhumanity towards man and not end in tears, as I did both during and after the concert? If I had been able to walk out, I would have and I would never attend another concert like this one,’ one woman wrote on Facebook.

‘Extraordinary, an almost frighteningly powerful work. I shall be processing what I saw and heard for a very long time,’ another wrote.

‘Truly brilliant piece of work with excellent performances by everyone…Hope you are all having a glass of wine too,’ a third said.

‘We both need time to process your incredible performance.’

‘Caught it in Canberra last night… beautiful, at times confronting, thought provoking and artistically striking concert. Everything great art should be,’ a fourth wrote.

Executive Producer Toby Chadd said the performance is designed to stay with the audience for weeks (pictured, Sydney's City Recital Hall)

Executive Producer Toby Chadd said the performance is designed to stay with the audience for weeks (pictured, Sydney’s City Recital Hall)

Attendees from the performance shared their experiences of the production through the Australian Chamber Orchestra's social media (pictured)

Attendees from the performance shared their experiences of the production through the Australian Chamber Orchestra’s social media (pictured)

Speaking to The Oz, Executive Producer Toby Chadd said the performance was designed to stay with the audience for weeks.

‘The Crowd & I is a cinematic and musical exploration of humanity’s ever-evolving existence on our crowded planet,’ he said.

‘Moving from playful to celebratory, contemplative to chaotic, utterly devastating to hopeful and transcendent, the concert explores that many forms that crowds take on around the world…how they impact human behavior and their effect on our planet.’

‘We have engaged a number of extraordinary filmmakers and visual artists from across the world for this project and paired this footage and imagery with a sweeping score crafted by Richard Tognetti and performed live by the ACO.’

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Australia

Country Fire Service boss Mark Johns raises concerns about plan to send volunteer firefighters out to medical emergencies

South Australia’s volunteer firefighters are already attending a growing number of medical emergencies and are not trained to deal with the trauma, according to the head of the Country Fire Service (CFS).

CFS chief officer Mark Johns has raised concerns about a state government probe into whether firefighters should attend more medical call-outs as the SA Ambulance Service (SAAS) remains under increasing pressure.

Premier Peter Malinauskas today launched a taskforce to look into the concept, after a 47-year-old father-of-two died in Plympton while waiting 40 minutes for an ambulance to arrive.

Mr Johns is not on the panel, however, Metropolitan Fire Service (MFS) chief Michael Morgan and South Australia Ambulance Service (SAAS) boss Robert Elliott will be part of the taskforce, along with Health Minister Chris Picton and union representatives.

“I lead a government that is open to ideas about what we can do to relieve pressure [in] any way we can,” Mr Malinauskas said.

“One such measure that is being proposed is drawing on the resources of the MFS to potentially respond in ways that are safe — all options are on the table.”

He said the taskforce had been established “in haste”, but other measures the government wanted to introduce — such as employing more paramedics — would take time.

CFS attend 1,000 medical emergencies

Mr Johns said his firefighters were already doing that, attending about 1,000 medical incidents in the past year and 14 this week.

“They attend these with no specialist medical training and no additional mental health support,” he said.

“Additionally, these incidents often happen in small communities, where the volunteers are turning up to an incident where they know the casualty.”

A man wearing a Country Fire Service uniform addresses the media in front of a CFS and Government of South Australia banner.
CFS chief officer Mark Jones has raised concerns.(ABCNews)

He said the volunteers responding to medical situations were doing it “outside the scope of their standard duties, in their own time, without pay and without the same support as paramedics.”

“Our volunteers are routinely called upon to attend traumatic events beyond the scope of their firefighting duties and these jobs fall outside of most people’s expectations when they join the service,” he said.

“I have seen the number of SAAS-assist jobs that our volunteers are expected to attend grow significantly.

“This is something that has occurred without any formal agreement or additional support for our volunteers doing an already tough job.”

Mr Jones said volunteers were trained in first aid but there was a “large difference” between providing CPR and addressing the underlying clinical health issues of a patient.

In a statement, an SAAS spokeswoman said the service already worked closely with fire services and police to support South Australians during a medical emergency.

“We are excited about the opportunity to work further with the SA Metropolitan Fire Service on a co-response model for the community here in [South Australia]and hope to grow the program over time,” she said.

“Any initiative that supports early CPR and early defibrillation is potentially life-saving.”

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Categories
US

Trump took the fifth more than 440 times in deposition with New York AG’s office

Former president Donald Trump on Wednesday declined to answer over 440 questions during a deposition with investigators working for New York Attorney General Letitia James’ office, instead choosing to invoke his fifth amendment right against self-incrimination each time.

According to multiple reports citing sources familiar with what happened during the Wednesday session, Mr Trump only answered one question — he provided his name when asked after he was sworn in as a witness.

The ex-president had announced his intention to avail himself of his fifth amendment protections earlier on Wednesday at the end of a lengthy, rambling statement filled with attacks on Ms James, who has been overseeing a long-running probe into whether Mr Trump’s eponymous real estate company violated New York tax laws.

“Under the advice of my counsel and for all of the above reasons, I declined to answer the questions under the rights and privileges afforded to every citizen under the United States Constitution,” he said.

Shortly after posting on his own social media platform about having arrived at Ms James’ “very plush, beautiful, and expensive” offices, the ex-president sent out the statement through his government-funded post-presidential office.

Under an image of the Great Seal of the United States, Mr Trump accused the Empire State’s top prosecutor of “mak[ing] a career” of “attacking” him and his business and of being “a failed politician who has intentionally colluded with others” to “carry out this phony years-long crusade that has wasted countless taxpayer dollars”.

“What Letitia James has tried to do the last three years is a disgrace to the legal system, an affect to New York State taxpayers, and a violation of the solemn rights and protections afforded by the United States Constitution,” said Mr Trump, who added that he “did nothing wrong”.

Mr Trump, who once famously suggested that invoking one’s Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination was itself evidence of criminality, said he now understands why one would “take the fifth” if innocent.

“When your family, your company, and all the people in your orbit have become the targets of an unfounded, politically motivated Witch Hunt supported by lawyers, prosecutors, and the Fake News Media, you have no choice,” he explained, adding that the FBI search of his Palm Beach, Florida residence as part of a federal investigation into whether he violated laws against theft of government documents and unlawful possession of classified information “wiped out any uncertainty” as to whether he’d refuse to answer questions on grounds that he might incriminate himself.

“I have absolutely no choice because the current Administration and many prosecutors in this Country have lost all moral and ethical bounds of decency,” he said.

Mr Trump’s refusal to answer questions could shield him from criminal liability in any cases brought as a result of Ms James’ probe (although under New York law she herself cannot bring criminal charges against him or his company).

But because the New York Attorney General’s investigation is playing out in civil court, legal experts say his decision to invoke the Fifth Amendment could be used against him if Ms James files any lawsuits against him or his company as a result of the investigation.

Categories
Entertainment

Tommy Lee’s X-rated Instagram photo shocks fans

Mötley Crüe drummer Tommy Lee has dropped jaws across the globe with an extremely revealing Instagram post.

The 59-year-old posted a photo of himself rocking out with his, ahem, private parts out on Thursday, shocking his 1.4 million followers and giving the social media censors something to do (though at the time of writing, the post was still up).

“Ooooopppsss,” Lee’s caption read.

Instagram has a strict anti-nudity policy.

Lee has never been too shy about letting it all hang out, previously appearing in a sex tape with Pamela Anderson while driving.

His latest post attracted immediate attention from the public and celebrities.

“Does the camera add 5 pounds?” comedian Ryan Sickler commented.

“OH MY GOD,” fellow comedian Brittany Furlan said.

Machine Gun Kelly’s drummer, Rook, sounded the most impressed, commenting: “I’M F****N DYING🤣🤣🤣🤣.”

And TikTok content creator Daniel Mac provided the wittiest double understanding, wondering: “How long will this stay up?”

In a follow-up post, Lee shared an image of an elephant face-to-face with a naked man, with the elephant asking: “How do you breathe through that little thing?”

One of the more succinct comments on that post read simply: “Go to sleep bro.”

At his band’s height in the 1980s, the famed drummer was known for sleeping with groupies, drugging heroically and swallowing small light bulbs for kicks.

He made headlines in June after returning to the stage with broken ribs.

Even though the iconic drummer only lasted five songs into the band’s hotly anticipated reunion kick-off tour at Atlanta, Georgia, it was actually five more songs than his doctor ordered.

In true Lee fashion, the musician ignored the doctor’s advice and went ahead with his performance during the band’s opening night alongside Def Leppard, Poison, and Joan Jett & The Blackhearts.

After soldiering on through five tracks on the drums, Lee’s pain was too much for him to handle.

“Man y’all ain’t gonna believe this s**t,” he wrote on social media ahead of the gig. “I broke four f***ing ribs!”

“But I’ve been resting and healing and even though the doctor tells me I shouldn’t play at all, you know I’m stubborn and I’ll beast through the pain every show for as many songs as I can.”

Lee revealed he had Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne’s drummer Tommy Clufetos save the show until he’s “back at 100 per cent.”

“We’ve all been waiting years for this moment and there’s no way I’m missing this! On with the show,” Lee added.

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MotoGP Silverstone: Alex Rins ‘destroyed’, what happened ‘not normal’ | MotoGP

The Suzuki star had an excellent chance of adding to his memorable 2019 Silverstone win as he continued at the head of the field up to and past the midway stage of the 20 laps.

But despite running the hardest rear tire compound, Rins began to suffer unexpected grip issues and couldn’t hide his disappointment after slipping all the way back to seventh place (albeit just +3.021s) at the finish.

“I was destroyed,” admitted to downbeat Rins. “Not because of the [physical effort] on my body, but because I gave it my maximum today.

“When I was in P1, I was riding so smooth, controlling the throttle and the rear slide, but at a certain point in the race I was struggling a lot to keep the rear traction.

“I don’t know why, we need to check with Michelin, because it was not normal. I was suffering a lot to keep a 2’00 lap time. In the last 5 or 6 laps, I was riding in 2’01.”

“It was frustrating, because I did a really good start,” the Spaniard added. “When I was up there in third, then second, I said to myself, ‘wow Alex, you’re riding so smooth!’ Then I overtook Pecco for first… but after the tire [performance] went down so fast, and I was a little bit in a panic, because I was struggling to hold the position.

“Usually, we are the ones that take care of the tire a lot and in the race we have a good margin. But I don’t know what happened.

“When Miller overtook me [for second], I was already struggling to follow him. And then lap by lap, it was even worse until the end.”

Team manager Livio Suppo also thought Rins was on course for Suzuki’s first win since 2020, until the grip issue struck.

“When he was leading, we really thought he’d be able to win, because he looked very comfortable and smooth,” Suppo said. “Unfortunately, he then started to lose grip on the rear tire.

“This is something we have to analyze with Michelin – we have seen the data but we need to understand why this happened. “

Rins’ team-mate Joan Mir didn’t even reach the checkered flag, crashing out of seventh place in the closing stages after losing the front.

“The temperatures were higher than the previous days and maybe being behind the group for a lot of laps meant I overheated the front more than I wanted,” he said. “I think the crash was due to this problem.

“I was trying to manage and take a bit of fresh air, but it was difficult. Especially because I was there in the group.

“I think that we could have gone forward a bit in the next laps, because I was feeling fine, but we’ll never know.”

Mir, yet to confirm his future but expected to join Repsol Honda, has now dropped to twelfth in the world championship, with future LCR Honda rider Rins in eighth.

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