Categories
Australia

‘One of the most inhumane decisions I’ve ever seen’: Inside one refugee’s nine-year detention nightmare

When Najat Janabi arrived in Australia with her 16-year-old son Ahmed Shalikhan in 2013, she thought they’d finally made it to safety.

Their boat from Indonesia was the final leg in a decades-long journey, which included escaping persecution in Iraq under Saddam Hussein’s regime and being stateless in Iran.

In reality, it was the beginning of another nightmare.

Nine years later, Ahmed is still locked in immigration detention — and there’s no end in sight.

“I lost hope, I lost my childhood, I lost my education. I always wanted to have a better life. This government. This department took everything from me,” he told the ABC.

Ahmed’s case is complex.

a woman sitting outdoors with her head covered
Najat Janabi arrived in Australia with son Ahmed Shalikhan in 2013. He was 16-years-old.(Supplied)

He last week returned to Sydney’s Villawood detention center after spending five months in the Mid North Coast Correctional Center because he was charged with assaulting an officer in detention.

He pleaded not guilty under the Mental Health Act, and the charge against him was dismissed.

Body-worn camera footage from inside Villawood shows Ahmed being detained by several Serco officers, who pin him to the ground and then to the walls.

The video was filmed in January.

In the recordings, the 24-year-old can be heard screaming “you’re breaking my arm”, “I’m choking” and “you’re punching me”.

In another, one of the guards can be heard saying: “That’s OK. You’re all right.”

In a statement, Serco said “all staff involved in the incident acted in accordance with procedure.”

“Serco’s priority is always to treat people in our care with dignity and respect in a safe and secure environment.”

A man wearing glasses talks on his mobile phone while sitting at a desk
Omar Juweinat has been scathing of his client’s situation.(ABC News: Nabil Al-Nashar)

Ahmed’s lawyer, Omar Juweinat, described the case as the “saddest I’ve had the displeasure of appearing in”.

“I can’t think of another defendant in recent history in a case in which I have appeared, that has suffered to the extent that he has,” he said.

“How on earth a government saw it fit to effectively carve out him from being in the company of his mother and his siblings is beyond me and one of the most inhumane decisions I’ve ever seen.”

Despite his charge being dismissed, the decision did not mean freedom for Ahmed — just a transfer from jail back to detention.

Falling through the cracks

After three years being moved around detention facilities, Najat was released into community detention in August 2016 and granted a safe haven visa.

This five-year visa granted her freedom to live, work and study in Australia.

Najat claims a doctor from the Department of Immigration promised her Ahmed’s case for release was progressing too.

“They said your son will be right behind you, in three months, they said he’ll be out in three months,” she said.

Ahmed, however, had “ongoing behavioral issues” that constituted a “barrier to a community release”, according to a case review from November 2015 by the Department of Home Affairs.

As early as July 2015, Ahmed had been involved in six incidents in detention, including two in which he was described as the perpetrator.

Several of those incidents, and subsequent ones, have been altercations with SERCO guards.

A young man in a white shirt stands in a garden
Ahmed Shalikhan has been in immigration detention for nine years.(Supplied)

Ahmed also lives with an intellectual disability and mental health issues.

At least four psychological reports, commissioned by his legal team and a GP at Villawood, amongst others, agree he now has depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, among other suspected diagnoses including anxiety, paranoia and suicidal ideation.

The evaluations detail how Ahmed’s father, who died when his son was a young child, lived with Alzheimer’s disease and was “prone to domestic violence”.

Some of them mention how Ahmed was left traumatized after his uncle took him on a tour of an Iranian prison aged 11, where he witnessed torture and saw dead bodies.

They also detail how Ahmed was bullied at primary school in Iran because of his ethnicity.

Several assessments have also suggested that Ahmed’s mental health has been declining.

An assessment from May 2014 found “the psychiatrist advises that remaining in his current confined environment is exacerbating his mental health”.

In October 2020, Ahmed was jailed after pleading guilty to several charges of using a carriage service to make a threat to kill, using a carriage service to menace, harass or cause offence, using a carriage service to make a threat to cause serious harm, and using a carriage service to procure persons under 16 years old for sexual activity.

“At first blush, the matters that he pleaded guilty to in the District Court seemed distasteful,” Juweinat said.

“Although, when considered in context of the evidence surrounding his mental illness, and amongst other things, his offending was part and parcel of his desperation to want to be able to be part of the outside world.”

Ahmed told the ABC he did not absolve himself from his crimes, but said detention was the wrong environment for him.

“I came to this country to have a better life you know, not to commit any crime,” he said.

“Because of what happened to me in the past when I was a child. That makes me to do mistakes.”

In a statement, a Department of Home Affairs spokesperson said it “was committed to the health and welfare of detainees.”

“All detainees receive appropriate physical and mental health care. There is a range of health services available including psychiatry, psychology and counseling services,” they said.

‘We created the man’

Ahmed’s human rights lawyer, Alison Battisson, argues her client’s criminal record should have no bearing on his release from detention because he and his mother were already recognized by the Department of Home Affairs as refugees and they are stateless.

“We effectively created the man he is today, and that is somebody who needs significant support and has committed some crimes,” she said.

“He never displayed any of these behaviors prior to being locked up as a child with a whole lot of other random people in unsafe circumstances.”

Close up of woman with black hair
Lawyer Alison Battisson founded the not-for-profit group Human Rights for All.(Supplied)

According to the Department of Home Affairs, there were 1,512 people in immigration detention as of March 2022.

Of those, there were 129 who had been there for five years or more.

There are no children in detention, but some, like Ahmed, grew up there and now count as adults.

Ms Battison told the ABC Ahmed could be reunited with his family thanks to ministerial “God-like” powers.

“It is literally as simple as signing a piece of paper. The Minister for Home Affairs or the Minister for Immigration would sign a statutory instrument … effectively granting him the visa,” she said.

In 2018, the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council Working Group on Arbitrary Detention called for Ahmed’s immediate release and found his deprivation of liberty in contravention of several human, civil and political rights.

A report by the same UN group on Ahmed’s case released that year contained a response from the federal government which claimed his “detention continues to be appropriate” and that his “current place of detention is suitable”.

It claimed Ahmed’s case had been reviewed 32 times.

Meanwhile, Najat is dealing with her own health conditions and relies on her older son for support.

I have arrived in Australia as a refugee in 2011, and is now a permanent resident.

Najat prays Ahmed will be allowed to rejoin the family and start his life in Australia soon.

“I want my son. I really need my son. He needs me. We talk on the phone, he cries and screams please end this,” she said.

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Categories
US

How a New Corporate Minimum Tax Could Reshape Business Investments

WASHINGTON — At the center of the new climate and tax package that Democrats appear to be on the verge of passing is one of the most significant changes to America’s tax code in decades: a new corporate minimum tax that could reshape how the federal government collects revenue and alter how the nation’s most profitable companies invest in their businesses.

The proposal is one of the last remaining tax increases in the package that Democrats are aiming to pass along party lines in coming days. After months of intraparty disagreement over whether to raise taxes on the wealthy or roll back some of the 2017 Republican tax cuts to fund their agenda, they have settled on a longstanding political ambition to ensure that large and profitable companies pay more than $0 in federal taxes .

To accomplish this, Democrats have recreated a policy that was last employed in the 1980s: trying to capture tax revenue from companies that report a profit to shareholders on their financial statements while bulking up on deductions to whittle down their tax bills.

The re-emergence of the corporate minimum tax, which would apply to what’s known as the “book income” that companies report on their financial statements, has prompted confusion and fierce lobbying resistance since it was announced last month.

Some initially confirmed the measure with the 15 percent global minimum tax that Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen has been pushing as part of an international tax deal. However, that is a separate proposal, which in the United States remains stalled in Congress, that would apply to the foreign earnings of American multinational companies.

Republicans have also misleadingly tried to seize on the tax increase as evidence that President Biden was ready to break his campaign promises and raise taxes on middle-class workers. And manufacturers have warned that it would impose new costs at a time of rapid inflation.

In a sign of the political power of lobbyists in Washington, by Thursday evening the new tax had already been watered down. At the urging of manufacturers, Senator Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona persuaded her Democratic colleagues to preserve a valuable deduction, known as bonus depreciation, that is associated with purchases of machinery and equipment.

The new 15 percent minimum tax would apply to corporations that report annual income of more than $1 billion to shareholders on their financial statements but use deductions, credits and other preferential tax treatments to reduce their effective tax rates well below the statutory 21 percent. It was originally projected to raise $313 billion in tax revenue over a decade, though the final tally is likely to be $258 billion once the revised bill is finalized.

The new tax could also inject a greater degree of complexity into the tax code, creating challenges in carrying out the law if it is passed.

“In terms of implementation and just bandwidth to deal with the complexity, there’s no doubt that this regime is complex,” said Peter Richman, a senior attorney adviser at the Tax Law Center at New York University’s law school. “This is a big change and the revenue number is large.”

Because of that complexity, the corporate minimum tax has faced substantial skepticism. It is less efficient than simply eliminating deductions or raising the corporate tax rate and could open the door for companies to find new ways to make their income appear lower to reduce their tax bills.

Similar versions of the idea have been floated by Mr. Biden during his presidential campaign and by Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts. They have been promoted as a way to restore fairness to a tax system that has allowed major corporations to dramatically lower their tax bills through deductions and other accounting measures.

According to an early estimate from the nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation, the tax would most likely apply to about 150 companies annually, and the bulk of them would be manufacturers. That spurred an outcry from manufacturing companies and Republicans, who have been opposed to any policies that scale back the tax cuts that they enacted five years ago.

Although many Democrats acknowledge that the corporate minimum tax was not their first choice of tax hikes, they have embraced it as a political winner. Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, shared Joint Committee on Taxation data on Thursday indicating that in 2019, about 100 to 125 corporations reported financial statement income greater than $1 billion, yet their effective tax rates were lower than 5 percent. The average income reported on financial statements to shareholders was nearly $9 billion, but they paid an average effective tax rate of just 1.1 percent.

“Companies are paying rock-bottom rates while reporting record profits to their shareholders,” Mr. Wyden said.

The Treasury Department had reservations about the minimum tax idea last year because of its complexity. If enacted, the Treasury would be responsible for crafting a raft of new regulations and guidance for the new law and for ensuring that the Internal Revenue Service could properly police it.

Michael J. Graetz, a tax law professor at Columbia University, acknowledged that calculating minimum taxes was complicated and that introducing a new tax base would add new challenges from a tax administration perspective, but he said that he did not view those obstacles as disqualifying. He noted that the current system had created opportunities for tax shelters and allowed companies to take losses for tax purposes that do not show up on their financial statements.

“If the problem that Congress is addressing is that companies are reporting high book profits and low taxes, then the only way to align those two is to base taxes on book profits to some extent,” Mr. Graetz, a former deputy assistant secretary for tax policy at the Treasury Department, said.

A similar version of the tax was included in a 1986 tax overhaul and allowed to expire after three years. Skeptics of revisiting such a measure have warned that it could create new problems and opportunities for companies to avoid the minimum tax.

“The evidence from the studies of outcomes around the Tax Reform Act of 1986 suggest that companies responded to such a policy by altering how they report financial accounting income — companies deferred more income into future years,” Michelle Hanlon, an accounting professor at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, told the Senate Finance Committee last year. “This behavioral response poses serious risks for financial accounting and the capital markets.”

Other opponents of the new tax have expressed concerns that it would give more control over the US tax base to the Financial Accounting Standards Board, an independent organization that sets accounting rules.

“The potential politicization of the FASB will likely lead to lower-quality financial accounting standards and lower-quality financial accounting earnings,” Ms. Hanlon and Jeffrey L. Hoopes, a University of North Carolina professor, wrote in a letter to members of Congress last year that was signed by more than 260 accounting academics.

Business groups have pushed back hard against the proposal and pressured Ms. Sinema to block the tax entirely. The National Association of Manufacturers and Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry released on Wednesday a poll of manufacturing workers, managers and advocates in the state that showed a majority opposed the new tax.

“It will make it harder to hire more workers, raise wages and invest in our communities,” said Chad Moutray, the chief economist of the manufacturing association. “Arizona’s manufacturing voters are clearly saying that this tax will hurt our economy.”

Ms. Sinema has expressed opposition to increasing tax rates and had reservations about a proposal to scale back the special tax treatment that hedge fund managers and private equity executives receive for “carried interest.” Democrats scrapped the proposal at her urging her.

When an earlier version of a corporate minimum tax was proposed last October, Ms. Sinema issued an approving statement.

“This proposal represents a common sense step toward ensuring that highly profitable corporations — which sometimes can avoid the current corporate tax rate — pay a reasonable minimum corporate tax on their profits, just as everyday Arizonans and Arizona small businesses do,” she said. In announcing that she would back an amended version of the climate and tax bill on Thursday, Ms. Sinema noted that it would “protect advanced manufacturing.”

That won plaudits from business groups on Friday.

“Taxing capital expenditures — investments in new buildings, factories, equipment, etc. — is one of the most economically destructive ways you can raise taxes,” Neil Bradley, chief policy officer of the US Chamber of Commerce, said in a statement. He added, “While we look forward to reviewing the new proposed bill, Senator Sinema deserves credit for recognizing this and fighting for changes.”

Emily Cochrane contributed reporting.

Categories
Entertainment

More sad news for the Queen as she loses close loved one

The Queen is facing more sad news, facing the loss of another close friend.


The Queen and Lady Myra Butter formed their close friendship as children, attending Brownies and swimming together.

Categories
US

Trump easily wins Texas CPAC 2024 GOP presidential nomination straw poll; DeSantis second

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

DALLAS – Former President Donald Trump convincingly won the 2024 GOP presidential nomination straw poll at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) three-day gathering in Texas

Trump, who’s repeatedly teased making another presidential run in 2024 to try and return to the White House, captured 69% of ballots cast in the anonymous online straw poll, according to results announced by CPAC on Saturday.

The support for the former president, who remains the most popular and influential politician in the Republican Party and continues to play a kingmaker’s role in GOP primaries, is up from his 59% showing in the anonymous online straw poll at the CPAC gathering in Orlando, Florida in February.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis came in second on the 2024 presidential nomination question, at 24%, down from his 28% showing him at CPAC in Orlando five months ago.

2024 WATCH: CPAC ATTENDEES CHOOSE FAVORITE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE AS TRUMP, DESANTIS REMAIN POPULAR

Former President Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Dallas, Texas on July 11, 2021. (Photo by Andy JACOBSOHN / AFP) (Photo by ANDY JACOBSOHN/AFP via Getty Images)

Former President Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Dallas, Texas on July 11, 2021. (Photo by Andy JACOBSOHN / AFP) (Photo by ANDY JACOBSOHN/AFP via Getty Images)
(Photo by ANDY JACOBSOHN/AFP via Getty Images)

DeSantis has seen his popularity surge among Republican voters in his state and around the nation over the past two and a half years, thanks in large part to his relentless pushback against COVID-19 restrictions amid the coronavirus pandemic as well as his aggressive actions in the culture wars.

WHAT TED CRUZ, AT CPAC, TOLD FOX NEWS ABOUT 2024

While DeSantis has repeatedly deflected talk of a potential run for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, political pundits view him as a potential White House contender.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Orlando, Florida, US February 24, 2022. REUTERS/Octavio Jones/File Photo

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Orlando, Florida, US February 24, 2022. REUTERS/Octavio Jones/File Photo
(Reuters)

The CPAC Texas straw poll results were released just ahead of the confab’s keynote speech by Trump. DeSantis, who appeared at the Orlando conference earlier this year, did not attend the Texas gathering.

Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who spoke Friday at the conference, grabbed 2% support on the straw poll ballot. Not one else among the 21 names listed on the ballot topped one percent.

“President Trump remains the most dominant force in American politics, and as yet another poll shows, it’s a reality that will propel the growth and success of the Republican Party through the Midterms and beyond,” Trump spokesman Taylor Budowich told Fox News after the results were released.

The 2024 straw poll also included a second list without Trump. His name of him was replaced by his eldest son of him, Donald Trump Jr.

DeSantis topped the second 2024 ballot, at 65%. Donald Trump Jr. grabbed 8% support, with Cruz at 6% and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at 5%. No one else topped two percent on the second ballot question.

The former president’s strong performance on the unscientific survey comes as no surprise. CPAC, long the largest and most influential gathering of conservative leaders and activists, has become a Trumpfest since his 2016 presidential election victory.

In a separate question on whom CPAC attendees would like to see as Trump’s running mate in 2024 if he launched a campaign, DeSantis grabbed 43% support, with South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem at 9%, and Pompeo at 7%.

No one else topped four percent on the running mate ballot question.

Voting on the CPAC Texas straw poll ballot was only open to attendees of the confab, with voting once again conducted through the CPAC app.

Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American Conservative Union, which runs CPAC, said “there’s an unbreakable bond between President Tump and the conservative movement. He simply did the things he promised to do and for that they are grateful.”

Veteran Republican pollster Jim McLaughlin told Fox News the CPAC straw poll ballot is “the ultimate barometer of what’s going on in the conservative movement.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

McLaughlin and Associates, which conducted polling for Trump’s successful 2016 election and unsuccessful 2020 re-election bid, once again oversaw the CPAC straw poll.

McLaughlin, who’s been attending CPAC for decades, said that “just like back in the old days when Ronald Reagan defined and was setting the tone for the conservative movement, it’s the same thing right now with Donald Trump.”

Categories
Entertainment

Armie Hammer reunites with estranged wife Elizabeth Chambers and their two kids in LA

Armie Hammer has been pictured reuniting with estranged wife Elizabeth Chambers for the first time since he was forced out of Hollywood and went to work as a timeshare salesman in the Cayman Islands.

Despite infidelity and allegations of rape and cannibalism, the pair appeared friendly as they spent quality time with their two kids Harper, seven, and Ford, five, in Los Angeles on Thursday.

Hammer wore a blue ‘Florida State Parks’ t-shirt, khaki shorts and flip flops. He was in the same Florida tee the last time DailyMail.com caught up with him a couple weeks ago.

The actor was with his two youngsters walking their dog Archie, the same dog that left Hammer with stiches in his hand 2020. The doting dad could be seen chatting with his kids and watching over his son as he picked up after their dog.

He then took the children to meet up with Chambers, who appeared sporty in black biker shorts, a t-shirt and sneaker. The mom-of-two enjoyed a sushi dinner with her kids.

Armie Hammer, 35, was seen Thursday in Los Angeles with estranged wife Elizabeth Chambers, 39, and their two kids, Harper, seven, and Ford, five

Despite infidelity and allegations of rape and cannibalisms, the pair appeared friendly as they spent quality time in Los Angeles on Thursday

Despite infidelity and allegations of rape and cannibalisms, the pair appeared friendly as they spent quality time in Los Angeles on Thursday

Though Hammer and Chambers separated in 2020 after he allegedly cheated on her at least twice, she has characterized him as 'My best friend'

Though Hammer and Chambers separated in 2020 after he allegedly cheated on her at least twice, she has characterized him as ‘My best friend’

Hammer wore a blue 'Florida State Parks' t-shirt, khaki shorts and flip flops.  He was in the same Florida tee the last time DailyMail.com caught up with him last month

Hammer wore a blue ‘Florida State Parks’ t-shirt, khaki shorts and flip flops. He was in the same Florida tee the last time DailyMail.com caught up with him last month

Hammer took the children to meet up with Chambers, who appeared sporty in black biker shorts, a t-shirt and sneakers

Hammer took the children to meet up with Chambers, who appeared sporty in black biker shorts, a t-shirt and sneakers

The doting dad could be seen chatting with his kids and watching over his son as he picked up after their dog Archie

The doting dad could be seen chatting with his kids and watching over his son as he picked up after their dog Archie

The doting dad could be seen chatting with his kids and watching over his son as he picked up after their dog Archie

Hammer's life was thrown into chaos last year after a number of women claimed that he had sexually abused them to satisfy his kinks, which reportedly included rape and cannibalism fantasies

Hammer’s life was thrown into chaos last year after a number of women claimed that he had sexually abused them to satisfy his kinks, which reportedly included rape and cannibalism fantasies

The mom-of-two enjoyed a sushi dinner with her kids and was seen carrying a tired Ford, five, while daughter Harper walked alongside

The mom-of-two enjoyed a sushi dinner with her kids and was seen carrying a tired Ford, five, while daughter Harper walked alongside

Chambers previously confirmed reports that Robert Downey Jr. had helped fund Hammer's rehab stint, and insisted that her husband was in a good place, DailyMail.com exclusively revealed

Chambers previously confirmed reports that Robert Downey Jr. had helped fund Hammer’s rehab stint, and insisted that her husband was in a good place, DailyMail.com exclusively revealed

Hammer’s life was thrown into chaos last year after a number of women claimed that he had sexually abused them while fulfilling his kinks, which allegedly included rape and cannibalism fantasies.

Hammer posted a photo of his hand with stitches in 2020 with the caption 'F**king Archie' - the family dog

Hammer posted a photo of his hand with stitches in 2020 with the caption ‘F**king Archie’ – the family dog

Two women said he told them he wanted to remove their ribs, barbecue them and eat them, and one accused him of slicing the letter ‘A’ into one of her thighs before sucking the blood out of her fresh wound.

After the accusations were made public, the actor was dropped by his agency, WME, and was subsequently let go from various film projects, including Paramount Plus series The Offer, Jennifer Lopez’s Shotgun Wedding, as well as the thriller Billion Dollar Spy.

He and Chambers had announced their split a few months before the allegations surfaced.

Hammer checked into a rehabilitation center to treat sex, drug and alcohol abuse, where he stayed from May through December 2021.

He had been laying low in the Cayman Islands after the rehab stint, supposedly staying with Chambers and their two children. Hammer returned from the Caymans after he was mobbed by media when photos showed him working as a timeshare salesman went viral.

DailyMail.com previously caught up with Chambers who confirmed Robert Downey Jr. had helped fund Hammer’s rehab stint and said ‘everybody needs help.’

“Everything is good,” Chambers said last month as she stepped out for dinner in Hollywood.

She declined to comment on whether Hammer had been selling timeshares while in the islands, and but insisted that he was happy.

‘I really couldn’t talk about that,’ she said, ‘But I think he’s happy and that’s good.’

Though Hammer and Chambers separated in 2020 after he allegedly cheated on her at least twice, she characterized him as ‘my best friend.’

Asked whether she felt her husband had healed since his scandal and rehab stint, she paused and said ‘I think everyone is always going through a process.’

As to any chance of rekindling their romance, Chambers only laughed.

Hammer and Chambers pictured at a red carpet premiere in 2017. Asked whether she felt her husband had healed since his scandal and rehab stint, Chambers said 'I think everyone is always going through a process'

Hammer and Chambers pictured at a red carpet premiere in 2017. Asked whether she felt her husband had healed since his scandal and rehab stint, Chambers said ‘I think everyone is always going through a process’

Hammer returned from the Caymans after he was mobbed by media when photos showing him working as a timeshare salesman went viral

Hammer returned from the Caymans after he was mobbed by media when photos showing him working as a timeshare salesman went viral

Earlier in July, Hammer's attorney denied that the actor was working as a salesman, following a viral tweet with an image that showed his face on a pamphlet as a concierge for a hotel

Earlier in July, Hammer’s attorney denied that the actor was working as a salesman, following a viral tweet with an image that showed his face on a pamphlet as a concierge for a hotel

Hammer's rehab stint was reportedly funded by friend and fellow actor Downey Jr., who himself has dealt with and climbed back from career shattering substance abuse problems.

Armie Hammer has been staying at a home owned by Robert Downey Jr. in Malibu where he is also attending AA meetings.  Pictured: Downey Jr's sprawling seven-acre compound.  It's unclear whether Hammer is staying at this property or another owned by the Ironman star

Armie Hammer has been staying at a home owned by Robert Downey Jr. in Malibu where he is also attending AA meetings. Pictured: Downey Jr’s sprawling seven-acre compound. It’s unclear whether Hammer is staying at this property or another owned by the Ironman star

Earlier in July, Hammer’s attorney denied that the actor was working as a salesman, following a viral tweet with an image that showed his face on a pamphlet as a concierge for a hotel.

The since-deleted tweet’s caption read: ‘My friend’s parents went on vacation in the Cayman Islands and Armie Hammer was their concierge.’

The pamphlet included discount vouchers and advertised that Hammer would take guests to swim ‘with wild turtles’ and point them to the ‘best snorkeling and diving spots.’

The source told Variety Hammer was working the job because he was ‘broke.’

‘He is working at the resort and selling timeshares. He is working at a cubicle, ‘the source said,’ The reality is he’s totally broke, and he is trying to fill the days and earn money to support his family from him.’

According to the source, Hammer, who is the great-grandson of oil tycoon Armand Hammer – who was worth an estimated $800 million at the time of his death – ‘is ​​not on the family payroll’ and has been forced to work a regular job after his Hollywood downfall.

The insider also shared that Hammer previously managed an apartment complex in the Cayman Islands.

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Categories
Sports

Premier League 2022-23 preview No 19: West Ham | Soccer

Guardian writers’ predicted position 8th (NB: this is not necessarily Jacob Steinberg’s prediction but the average of our writers’ tips)

Last season’s position 7th

Odds to win the league (via Oddschecker) 150-1

prospects

The aim is to challenge for a place in the top four again. The question is whether West Ham have grown stale. They captured the imagination with their run to the Europa League semi-finals last season, but a small squad struggled to cope with the additional workload and David Moyes has spent the summer trying to add more quality in several positions.

The positive is that West Ham have lessened their dependence on Michail Antonio, who looked weary during the second half of last season. The striker has had no competition for his place during the last 18 months, but the arrival of Gianluca Scamacca from Sassuolo gives Moyes’s attack a fresh look. A tall and powerful forward, Scamacca scored 16 goals in Serie A last season and has broken into the Italy squad. The 23-year-old has all the makings of a fan favourite, though the recent history of attacking players moving to the Premier League from Serie A is not hugely encouraging.

Ready for the Premier League 2022-2023: West Ham – video

However, the striking situation is not the only issue. Moyes needs more from Saïd Benrahma and Nikola Vlasic in attacking midfield. He will hope that Flynn Downes is capable of helping the overworked Tomas Soucek and Declan Rice in central midfield. As for the defence, all is not well. Nayef Aguerd, a Moroccan centre-back who has signed for £30m from Rennes, could be out for three months after undergoing ankle surgery. Angelo Ogbonna is just back from a long-term knee injury. Issa Diop wants to leave and Kurt Zouma picked up injuries last season. Another huge season for Craig “Ballon” Dawson, then?

Of course, there is no need to panic yet. West Ham have made rapid progress in the last two years. But have opponents started to work them out? Moyes, who tore into his players after defeat to Brighton on the final day forced West Ham to settle for a place in the Europa Conference League, has sounded a little impatient recently. It could be a testing campaign.

Hayleigh Bosher, author of Copyright in the Music Industry, says that Beyoncé didn’t need to remove the interpolation for legal reasons but appears to have done so out of respect – and perhaps because of public perception.

“It doesn’t matter that Beyoncé didn’t actually infringe Kelis’s rights,” says Bosher. “The point is that people think she did because the public aren’t educated about music copyright. [Kelis] doesn’t have any legal standing but by being vocal on social media, she creates emotional and moral capital.”

The discourse around Renaissance has opened up questions about the politics of sampling in modern pop. Today, sampling is big business. In the credits for the 16-track Renaissance, there are nods to 17 other songs. Meanwhile, half of the current UK Top 10 singles chart features samples, ranging from excerpts of Silk’s 1979 track I Can’t Stop (Turning You On) to 2009 hit In for the Kill by La Roux.

As producer and Beyoncé collaborator the-Dream said this week, sampling came of age with the rise of hip-hop almost 50 years ago, when samples were used to make up for sparse production due to a lack of funds. Today, with hip-hop the most popular genre in the US, and dance – another sample-heavy genre – experiencing a resurgence, samples are a prerequisite for chart success.

While Beyoncé appears to have been vigilant about crediting all her samples, not doing so – or being accused of not doing so – brings the potential for an expensive lawsuit once the music is released. In 2017, Ed Sheeran added songwriting credits for the three writers of TLC’s No Scrubs to his song, Shape of You, after being accused of lifting the melody from the 90s hit.

The song originally contained a TLC sample which was taken out before it was released. The basis of the dispute, says Bosher, was the “recreation of a part of the song that’s slightly similar”. As a result, Sheeran handed over 15% of Shape of You’s publishing royalties, which is “extremely high for such a small part of the song”, she says.

The difference between interpolation and direct sampling is another potential cause for contention. Interpolation is often used for creative reasons – to reinterpret older releases and offer a nod to historically relevant tracks. However, there is evidence of record labels favoring the former due to only needing to clear one set of rights – the publishing, rather than those attached to the master recording – in order to avoid sacrificing income.

A music industry insider with extensive major label experience rubbishes this. “The label doesn’t determine anything of what gets created in the studio. You can’t tell an artist what song to sample.”

Ed Sheeran added songwriting credits for the writers of TLC's No Scrubs to his song, Shape of You, after being accused of lifting the melody.
Ed Sheeran added songwriting credits for the writers of TLC’s No Scrubs to his song, Shape of You, after being accused of lifting the melody. Photograph: Hannah McKay/PA

But they admit that artists might be encouraged to interpolate to avoid what is often a lengthy process to clear rights, which can delay a song’s release date. This is why the UK’s reigning summer hit, Afraid to Feel by LF System, interpolates Silk’s I Can’t Stop (Turning You On) rather than directly samples it.

Amber Davis, who works with artists including Stormzy and Dave at publisher Warner Chappell Music, says: “In this current climate, where you want to drop the song next week or you’re doing a freestyle that’s got a sample, the turnaround time pressure is quite sensitive.”

While Davis would like to see more completely original work, it doesn’t look like the widespread practice of sampling will die down anytime soon. In recent years, investors have bought up a wealth of song catalogs from artists including Leonard Cohen and Justin Timberlake for nine-figure sums and will be expecting a heady return. “Songs finding new life is what a lot of these investments are basing their futures on,” says the music industry insider.

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Flashback: Manchin preached bipartisanship. Will he take the same position on inflation act?

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A question arising from Sen. Joe Manchin’s, DW.Va., newfound backing of a massive social spending and taxation bill is if he will insist on Republican input and support as he previously did with other high profile legislation being pushed by Democrats.

Last year, Manchin declared that any legislation addressing voting rights, something Democrats declared was “under attack” at the time, must include input and support from Republicans in order to receive his backing.

He ultimately declined to support the Democrat-backed For the People Act, citing its lack of bipartisanship, and slammed his fellow Democrats for “partisan policymaking,” arguing it would “destroy” American democracy.

“The right to vote is fundamental to our American democracy and protecting that right should not be about party or politics. Least of all, protecting this right, which is a value I share, should never be done in a partisan manner,” he wrote in a statement at the time.

OVER 230 ECONOMISTS WARN MANCHIN’S SPENDING BILL WILL PERPETUATE INFLATION

US Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) delivers remarks to reporters at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, US November 1, 2021.

US Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) delivers remarks to reporters at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, US November 1, 2021.
(REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst)

“The truth is there is a better way — if we seek to find it together,” he later added.

Every Republican member of the Senate is expected to oppose the Inflation Reduction Act, the official name of the reconciliation spending bill struck in a behind closed doors deal between Manchin and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.

MANCHIN 2024 RE-ELECTION CHANCES COULD ‘DISAPPEAR IN A FLASH’ FOLLOWING SUPPORT FOR NEW SPENDING BILL

In contrast to his previous demands for bipartisanship, Manchin’s appears ready to help carry the bill over the line without any help from Senate Republicans. A simple majority will pass the legislation, with Vice President Kamala Harris able to break a 50-50 tie in favor of the Democrats.

Fox News Digital reached out to Manchin’s office for comment and received a statement from a spokeswoman touting his past efforts at bipartisanship, but making no mention of any desire for Republican input on the bill.

“For years, Senator Manchin has worked in a bipartisan way to ensure we are producing more energy domestically and paying down our national debt and much of that work is reflected in the Inflation Reduction Act,” communications director Samantha Runyon said in the statement.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of NY, speaks to the media after a Democratic policy luncheon, Tuesday, Oct. 19, 2021, on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of NY, speaks to the media after a Democratic policy luncheon, Tuesday, Oct. 19, 2021, on Capitol Hill in Washington.
(AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

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The Senate is set to reconvene Saturday and is expected to vote to begin debate on the bill.