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Australia

My birth mother was not allowed to name her baby. But the name she gave me in her heart de ella is real | adoption

Yot wasn’t until 2020, at the age of 52, that I was given the right to use my name. But as with all things adoption, nothing is quite as simple as it seems. Like other babies given to infertile couples under Australia’s “forced adoption” policies, my birth certificate was canceled soon after I was born; a second birth certificate created a legal fiction to make it look like I was born to the infertile couple.

With a stroke of a pen I was denied connection with all of my family – my cousins, aunts, uncles, grandmothers – and my first given name. After a few months I was handed over to the couple who took me home. I had no social history, no medical, racial or genetic history. It was all top secret.

The records of somewhere between 140,00 and 250,000 Australian babies were sealed by law, with a promise that the truth would never be revealed.

Things on that front have gradually changed, and adopted people are now allowed to use the names on either of our birth certificates. When I first read about these changes I cried – it was the first time I had seen the dual identity and divided loyalty that shadows adopted people fully acknowledged.

But on my first birth certificate, the name my mother chose for me is missing, and I am identified by the word “Unnamed” with my mother’s surname. According to that certificate, my name is Unnamed Champion. My second birth certificate states the name given to me by my adopted family.

The Integrated Birth Certificate allows me to choose either of these two names, but it seems unhelpful for adopted people to be known as “Unnamed” when the intention of Integrated Birth Certificates is to help adopted people connect with their full identities.

It has taken me many months to realize that this profound breakthrough does not achieve what it set out to do: it does not allow me to see the name my mother wanted for me.

Australia weekend

The only place my mother was ever allowed to use my name was inside her mind. While she was being told to stop crying by the “real” mothers breastfeeding their babies in the beds beside her, while she was given milk-suppression drugs without her knowledge, while she signed all the papers because she did everything she was told, the name was in her head and heart: Jona.

Like the perpetual state of longing, the name haunted her for years, though even now Jona still doesn’t exist. The state of New South Wales sent me to live with people who called me something else. They called me Eudora*, the name I’ve been called for over 50 years.

The simple facts are this: I was born and hidden where my mother couldn’t find me. She had no advocate, and she was a minor, with no legal capacity to sign me away. A girl like her was not allowed to name her baby by her.

That was part of the punishment of being shamed and blamed in the birthing ward as a girl gone bad. Above the bed was a three letter sign, “BFA”, to identify that here was a Baby For Adoption.

“Unnamed Champion”. Born in a small regional town on the outskirts of Sydney, on a midwinter morning in the late 1960s, and no mention anywhere of “Jona”. For me, the confusion and cognitive dissonance seem impossible to resolve.

I recently explained to a psychologist that I have two families with two divergent histories. I look like estos people. I sound like estos people, I think and behave like estos people, the people I was born to.

My brother, on the other hand, he is one of those people, from the other side of my life, the people I was sent to. My mum is one of those people. And my dad, well, he is one of those people too.

For an adopted person, the idea of ​​dad is complicated. The idea of ​​mum is complicated. The idea of ​​brother and sister, home and belonging – it’s all complicated. Even your name, and the names we use to identify family – none of it is easy to understand.

Think of the words – mum, dad – how can anyone experience them without a visceral response in the belly, in the heart, in the throat? When I hear those words, there is a glitch, a realigning moment, while I track who holds those roles in my life. None of it gets easier over time.

In 2021 I applied to the Department of Community and Justice for my birth records. It is now July, 2022. A few months ago, I was asked to place an extra signature on the form, and told to wait another nine months for my Integrated Birth Certificate to arrive. This document gives me the choice of using either the name from my first birth certificate, or the second one – whichever I prefer.

After a whole lifetime, I finally get to choose. But first I must wait a whole new gestation period for the documents to arrive. And then, I will not be given the choice between identifying as Jona or Eudora. I will be offered the choice between Eudora or Unnamed.

The legislation governing my separation from my birth mother erased the history written into my body as though my DNA never existed. But it does exist, it’s real. And the name she calls me in her heart is real too.

* Name has been changed

In Australia, support is available at Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636, Lifeline on 13 11 14, and at MensLine on 1300 789 978. In the UK, the charity Mind is available on 0300 123 3393 and Childline on 0800 1111. In the US Mental Health America is available on 800-273-8255

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US

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.

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Sports

Rugby news 2022: Springbok triumph adds to woes of embattled All Blacks, South Africa vs New Zealand score

South Africa has defeated New Zealand 26-10 on Sunday morning AEST in the Rugby Championship opener in Mbombela, adding to the woes of the embattled All Blacks.

New Zealand flew to South Africa having lost four of their previous five matches amid calls for coach Ian Foster and captain Sam Cane to be sacked.

Foster and Cane will now know that another defeat to the arch foes when the teams clash again next Saturday in Johannesburg will almost certainly spell the end for both of them.

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The ferocity of the Springboks constantly unsettled the All Blacks, who were lucky to trail only 10-3 at halftime having been outplayed in the opening 40 minutes.

New Zealand did win more possession in the second half but basic errors cost them and their only try, from replacement loose forward Shannon Frizell, arrived when South Africa were reduced to 14 men.

Winger Kurt-Lee Arendse, scorer of the first South African try, was red-carded on 75 minutes after fouling airborne fly-half Beauden Barrett.

“It was exactly what we wanted. We wanted to be upfront,” said South Africa captain and flanker Siya Kolisi.

“Our high balls were good. We did all the things we wanted to do. We made the tackles, we know how dangerous they can be. They have a couple of players who can break the game open at any time.”

Under-fire Cane said: “A lot of credit has to go to the Springboks, especially the way they played in the first half. They threw a heck of a lot at us. We did well to absorb that but it took a lot out of us.

“They are extremely good at applying pressure. Their kicking game was good, they probably won that as well.”

South African hooker Malcolm Marx was warmly greeted by the sellout 42,367 crowd in recognition of him winning his 50th cap when he ran on to the field ahead of his teammates in the northeastern city.

There was a dramatic start to the southern hemisphere championship opener with Springboks scrum-half Faf de Klerk knocked out after his head struck the knee of All Blacks wing Caleb Clarke.

De Klerk had to be stretched off, but received lengthy applause when he appeared on the sideline midway through the opening half having failed a head injury assessment test.

Inexperienced Jaden Hendrikse, who debuted in a home series against Wales last month, replaced de Klerk just 43 seconds into the match.

Fired-up South Africa dominated early possession and territory and went ahead on eight minutes when Arendse scored his first try for the reigning world champions in only his second appearance.

The New Zealand defense failed to grasp a lofted kick from fly-half Handre Pollard and center Lukhanyo Am fed Arendse, who raced over the tryline.

Unpredictable goal-kicker Pollard did well to convert from the touchline and increased the lead to 10 points on 22 minutes by slotting a close-range penalty.

There was a sudden change of momentum as halftime approached with New Zealand, helped by a steadier scrum, awarded four penalties in quick succession.

Fullback Jordie Barrett, one of three brothers in the All Blacks starting line-up, converted one of the penalties on 36 minutes to narrow the gap to seven points and it remained 10-3 until halftime.

In the build-up to the match, Springboks coach Jacques Nienaber had emphasized the need to translate dominance into points and will have been disappointed that his team were only seven points in front.

He would have been thrilled with the performance of Marx, though, as the Japan-based front-rower won several turnovers and figured constantly in assaults on the All Blacks.

In the second half, Pollard kicked two penalties and a drop goal to give the home team a 19-3 lead before both teams scored late tries.

Frizell dived over in the corner and fellow substitute Richie Mo’unga converted, then replacement back Willie le Roux scored beside the post and Pollard converted for a personal tally of 16 points.

– AFP

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Australia

Plastic can be an essential accessibility tool for people with disabilities. What happens when we ban it?

As a person living with a physical disability, there are a few items I require to help me live an independent life.

Pre-prepared vegetables, ready meals and drinking straws — some of which are made of plastic — are absolutely essential for people like me.

I have limited use of my hands and this has made preparing and cooking meals a nightmare. Up until the end of last year I simply avoided cooking meals myself as the kitchen tools I needed weren’t suitable.

Since then I have slowly been building my confidence in the kitchen with the help of pre-cut ingredients. But I still feel a sense of regret and guilt loading my shopping basket up with pre-packaged items due to the cost and the amount of leftover plastic waste.

The reality is that plastic can be an essential accessibility tool.

It’s not just prepackaged food. Plastic single-use plastic straws are vital for people who cannot lift a glass to their mouth or have motor control, chewing or swallowing issues — and a lack of availability can cause enormous worry.

An uncomfortable trade-off

Craig Wallace, head of policy at Advocacy for Inclusion, says the ban on plastic straws introduces another layer of complexity into the lives of people with disability by requiring them to negotiate the availability of an item that they need to remain hydrated or to carry that item with them.

And while exemptions allow plastic straws to be supplied to people with medical conditions or disability are now in place in most states and territories, there is no requirement for plastic straws to be carried — meaning no guarantee they will be available. Paper straws are often not suitable as they lack the flexibility and durability of their plastic counterparts.

A man with a bald head, maroon tie and black suit with white shirt
Craig Wallace says a ban on plastic straws adds a layer of complexity to the lives of people with disability.(Supplied)

“We don’t ask people without disabilities to carry cups and saucers and eating implements when they go out to a restaurant. We shouldn’t be asking people with disabilities who need plastic straws to consume liquids to have to supply them themselves,” Wallace says.

It’s an uncomfortable trade-off against a small but highly affected group of people. And while the ban does include provisions for cafes and restaurants to stock straws, these exemptions are meaningless as venues are under no legal obligation to include them.

“We’re weighing the ability of disabled people to have a glass of water in a cafe without choking to death against harm caused by plastic straws,” Wallace says.

accessible living room

The pre-packaged food debate was in the spotlight last month when a consumer created a thread on Reddit condemning “dumb” and “lazy” shoppers for purchasing re-cut vegetables and contributing to plastic pollution. Included in the post was a photo of the range, — trays and bags of diced onion, sliced ​​spring onion, sliced ​​potato and pumpkin cubes.

Teresa Berbury has suffered from severe chronic pain for the past seven years and recently developed monoplegia with paralysis in one leg from a failed back surgery. As she lives on her own, maintaining an independent lifestyle can be both challenging and rewarding.

A woman in a pink hoodie looks through the fridge while sitting in a wheelchair.
For Teresa Burbery, maintaining an independent lifestyle is challenging but also rewarding.(Supplied)

“When preparing the food I’m again reaching above onto the bench as it is much higher than a wheelchair,” Berbury says. “With every reach [I’m] putting strain on my back injury… By the time I’ve eaten the pain levels have really kicked in… This would be my life every night if I didn’t have pre-packaged meals.”

Knowing her weekly food has been prepared, cooked and delivered helps Berbury to relax without triggering unnecessary waves of pain.

But she says there are times she feels that the items she needs to use in order to live independently is something many fail to understand.

“People may assume that because I’m sitting down on my wheelchair I’m perfectly comfortable and it might even look easier,” Berbury says.

“But when you break down what is actually involved and how limited your movements are while steering your chair, combined with each movement triggering pain, it’s something many people are unable to relate to.”

Korey Gunnis has also relied on frozen and ready meals through the NDIS in the past, but says they have been more difficult to obtain in recent times.

“As someone with cerebral palsy and an autoimmune condition, it made life a bit more easier for me at the end of the day, when I have more fatigue and pain.”

Gunnis says to simply label the use of pre-prepared foods as lazy misses the point.

“[It] comes from a place of ignorance, and whoever made that statement does not understand what it is like to live with a chronic illness and disability,” he argues.

a man in an orange striped shirt and beret stands in front of a valley filled with clouds and a sandstone escarpment behind it.
Korey Gunnis, who lives with cerebral palsy and an autoimmune condition, has relied on frozen and ready meals through the NDIS to make life a bit easier when he is juggling fatigue and pain.(Supplied)

The cost of living independently

Aside from the plastic waste, the costs of pre-prepared items can be twice or even three times the amount of buying ingredients individually.

And with the current cost of living crisis, prices are on the rise.

Disability advocate and appearance activist Carly Findlay believes the cost of essential, pre-prepared food items must change to be more accessible for people with special needs.

“The cost must [be taken on] by the big organizations which are using more plastic and creating more waste and fossil fuels than individual disabled people,” Findlay says. “Many disabled people live on or below the poverty line and are significantly unemployed or underemployed compared to the rest of the population. “

A woman with curly hair, wearing a bright dress and polka-dot leather jacket stands smiling in front of a blue velvet curtain.
Carly Findlay believes the cost of pre-packaged food, that can be life-changing for people with disabilities, is too high.(Supplied: Sam Biddle)

In 2018, the Australian Bureau of Statistics reported that the personal income of people with disability was $505 per week, less than half that of people without disability. People with disability were also more likely to live in households with a lower gross household income compared with people without disability. Among those whose household income was known, half lived in a household in the lowest two quintiles, more than twice the frequency of people without disability.

“Pre-prepared veggies and ready meals may be unaffordable for many disabled people. The disability tax — the cost disabled people pay for accessibility — is real, and this [prepackaged food] proves it,” Findlay says.

A cohesive outlook

Jane Bremmer is the campaign coordinator for Zero Waste Australia. Having a son with cerebral palsy, she understands how necessary some of the plastic wrapped food and utensil products are for people with disabilities.

“There is always going to be a need for semi-processed food for people with disabilities that need that support. And we have a duty of care to provide that in our society, so that we create a more level playing field for everybody,” Bremmer says.

“I don’t think it necessarily has to be plastic, but there may be many uses that are essential for people with all sorts of different abilities that need lightweight, easy packaging.”

Chopped food and vegetables, or processed meals, can be important for many different kinds of people.

Chopped up vegetables and salad leaves in a pre-packaged plastic bag sold in a supermarket
Chopped food and vegetables can be useful for many kinds of people. (www.woolworths.com.au)

“So we have to find safe packaging alternatives for that, or keep them as essential uses for people who really need them,” she says.

Teresa Berbury agrees, pointing out that she is always thinking about what can make life easier on her and the planet.

“I do everything I can to minimize my impact however where humans are suffering, any product or packaging that can make our lives healthier and significantly less painful must be protected from environmental bans,” she says. “With what I live with every day I absolutely deserve this help.”

Craig Wallace says the issue isn’t a matter of just prioritizing climate change. It’s a matter of not prioritizing justice for people who are affected.

“It is really appropriate to take into account the needs and requirements of people with disabilities as we implement pollution control measures,” he says.

The future is recyclable

For Jane Bremmer, the best outcome would be that the packaging industry redesigns their products so that they’re safe and cost effective for all. “It’s completely doable,” she says. “We just need the political and corporate motivation to make it happen.”

Australian companies such as Arnott’s, We Bar None and Vegan Dairy have all commenced changes to their packaging.

“I would love to see biodegradable packaging integrated into these food services. Even cardboard would minimize a lot of the plastic component to food packaging,” Berbury says.

woman holding up six energy bars
Victorian business We Bar None uses home-compostable packaging.(ABC Ballarat: Dominic Cansdale)

Some major supermarket chains have already introduced recyclable packaging into their ranges.

In 2018, We Bar None became the first Victorian business to use 100 per cent home compostable wrappers for its energy bars, and Vegan Dairy in 2020 began using 100 per cent home compostable vacuum seal bags and labels for their entire range of plant-based cheeses .

And Arnott’s has committed to transition the soft plastic used in all biscuit packaging from multi to mono-material, so it is fully recyclable, by the end of 2023.

“If pre-prepared veggies and ready meals are making life easier for other people, and not harming you, don’t hate on them,” says Carly Findlay. “Accessibility comes in many forms – and food accessibility is a human right.”

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Categories
US

Large Indiana employers Eli Lilly and Cummins speak out about the state’s new restrictive abortion law

An Eli Lilly and Company pharmaceutical manufacturing plant is pictured at 50 ImClone Drive in Branchburg, New Jersey, March 5, 2021.

Mike Segar | Reuters

Drugmaker Eli Lilly, one of the biggest employers in Indiana, said that the state’s newly passed law restricting abortions will cause the company to grow away from its home turf.

Lilly said in a statement on Saturday that it recognizes abortion as a “divisive and deeply personal issue with no clear consensus among the citizens of Indiana.”

“Despite this lack of agreement, Indiana has opted to quickly adopt one of the most restrictive anti-abortion laws in the United States,” Eli Lilly said. “We are concerned that this law will hinder Lilly’s — and Indiana’s — ability to attract diverse scientific, engineering and business talent from around the world. Given this new law, we will be forced to plan for more employment growth outside our home state.”

Indiana’s Legislature on Friday became the first in the nation to pass new legislation restricting access to abortions since the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. The state was among the earliest Republican-run state legislatures to debate tighter abortion laws after the Supreme Court ruling in June that removed constitutional protections for the procedure.

Lilly employs about 10,000 people in Indiana, where it has been headquartered in Indianapolis for more than 145 years.

Cummins, an engine manufacturing company that also employs about 10,000 people in Indiana, spoke out over the weekend against the new law as well.

“The right to make decisions regarding reproductive health ensures that women have the same opportunity as others to participate fully in our workforce and that our workforce is diverse,” a company spokesman said in a statement.

“There are provisions in the law that conflict with this, impact our people, impede our ability to attract and retain top talent and influence our decisions as we continue to grow our footprint with a focus on selecting welcoming and inclusive environments,” the Cummins spokesman said.

The two businesses join a growing list of companies, including tech giant Apple and denim retailer Levi Strauss, which are offering their employees resources for reproductive care in states where restrictions have been put into place.

Eli Lilly noted Saturday that although the pharmaceutical company has expanded its employee health plan coverage to include travel for reproductive services, “that may not be enough for some current and potential employees.”

Indiana’s abortion ban is expected to go into effect on Sept. 15. It comes with some exceptions, including for cases of rape or incest, and for protecting the mother’s life.

President Joe Biden’s administration has also condemned Indiana’s decision. White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called it a “devastating step.”

“And, it’s another radical step by Republican legislators to take away women’s reproductive rights and freedom, and put personal health-care decisions in the hands of politicians rather than women and their doctors,” she said in a statement.

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Categories
US

Republican who voted to impeach Trump projected to win primary | Republicans

Dan Newhouse, one of the few Republican House members to vote in January in favor of the impeachment of Donald Trump, is poised to move forward to the general election in Washington state, according to a projection by the Associated Press.

Newhouse was one of 10 Republicans who voted in January to have Trump impeached, even ahead of explosive revelations about the former president’s support and endorsement of the January 6 riots just a year prior.

This victory comes on the heels of another fellow Republican supporter of the impeachment, Peter Meijer, losing his votes in Michigan.

Republican Loren Culp, who has been backed by Trump in the election, was a close second to Newhouse in Washington’s fourth congressional district, garnering the second highest number of Republican votes in four out of the eight counties. In some of the counties where Newhouse won, however, I have received almost double the number of votes as Culp.

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Culp was up against six other Republican candidates, and will face Doug White, the district’s only Democratic candidate, in November for the generation election.

Despite his victory, the journey has rarely been smooth for Newhouse. Following his vote for impeachment in January, six Republican leaders in his district demanded his resignation.

He defended his position, claiming he “made a decision to vote based on my oath to support and defend the constitution”.

On 2 August, he had a majority vote in three out of those six counties that had voted for his resignation.

Categories
Sports

Wallabies vs Argentina, live, scores, result, team news, highlights, Michael Hooper

Welcome to live coverage of the Wallabies vs Argentina from Mendoza. Follow all the live action in our blog below!

The Michael Hooper-less Wallabies have it all to in the second half in Mendoza, with the visitors trailing Michael Cheika’s Argentina Pumas 19-10.

Without their captain, the Wallabies started slowly with their discipline, ball security and clearing kicks poor.

The Wallabies trailed 7-0 after a try to Pablo Matera, which came after Nic White and Quade Cooper failed to clear their own line from the opening kick.

LIVE MATCH CENTER: CLICK HERE

Three points to Cooper settled down proceedings, but Argentina managed to restore their converted try margin soon after.

Some Cooper magic sent Jordan Petaia over to score, before the Wallabies returned to their ill-discipline ways as Emiliano Boffelli added another two penalties to give the Pumas a 19-10 lead at half-time.

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Jordan Petaia scores a try against Argentina at Estadio Malvinas Argentinas on August 06, 2022 in Mendoza, Argentina.  Photo: Getty Images
Jordan Petaia scores a try against Argentina at Estadio Malvinas Argentinas on August 06, 2022 in Mendoza, Argentina. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

Fraser McReight is playing in the No.7 jersey following Hooper’s withdrawal on the eve of the Rugby Championship opener.

The Reds No.7 is one of eight changes to the starting side, which is missing hooker Dave Porecki and center Samu Kerevi.

WALLABIES (15-1): Tom Wright, Jordan Petaia, Len Ikitau, Hunter Paisami, Marika Koroibete, Quade Cooper, Nic White, Rob Valetini, Fraser McReight, Jed Holloway, Matt Philip, Darcy Swain, Allan Alaalatoa, Folau Fainga’a, James Slipper (c)

Reservations: Lachlan Lonergan, Matt Gibbon, Taniela Tupou, Nick Frost, Rob Leota, Pete Samu, Jake Gordon, Reece Hodge

COUGARS (15-1): Juan Cruz Mallia, Santiago Cordero, Matias Orlando, Jeronimo de la Fuente, Emiliano Boffelli, Santiago Carreras, Tomas Cubelli, Pablo Matera, Marcos Kremer, Juan Martin Gonzalez, Tomas Lavanini, Matias Alemanno, Francisco Gomez Kodela, Julian Montoya (c), Nahuel Tetaz Chaparro

Reservations: Agustin Creevy, Thomas Gallo, Joel Sclavi, Santiago Grondona, Rodrigo Bruni, Lautaro Bazan Velez, Tomas Albornoz, Matias Moroni

Follow all the live action in our blog below!

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Categories
US

Musk suggests deal could go through if Twitter provides info on confirming users

Tesla CEO Elon Musk suggested early Saturday that his acquisition deal with Twitter could still go through if the social media platform provided information about how it confirms that sampled accounts are real.

“If Twitter simply provides their method of sampling 100 accounts and how they’re confirmed to be real, the deal should proceed on original terms,” Musk tweeted. “However, if it turns out that their SEC filings are materially false, then it should not.”

Later he tweeted he was challenging the CEO of Twitter to a debate.

“I hereby challenge@paraga to a public debate about the Twitter bot percentage. Let him prove to the public that Twitter has <5% fake or spam daily users!” Musk tweeted.

Musk also tweeted out a poll asking if less than 5 percent of daily users on Twitter were spam or fake.

The tweets from Musk are the latest in the drama between the SpaceX CEO and the social media platform following legal action over his bid to buy Twitter.

Earlier this year, Musk reached a deal to buy Twitter for $44 billion, but less than three months later, he terminated the deal. His legal team argued at the time there was inadequate information provided about bots on Twitter’s site. The team also alleged that the social media company had fired several employees in violation of their agreement and that its statements regarding bots were not accurate.

The social media platform sued Musk to force him to complete the acquisition.

“Having mounted a public spectacle to put Twitter in play, and having proposed and then signed a seller-friendly merger agreement, Musk apparently believes that he—unlike every other party subject to Delaware contract law—is free to change his mind, trash the company, disrupt its operations, destroy stockholder value, and walk away,” the lawsuit against Musk said.

But Musk filed a countersuit earlier this month, with his lawyers alleging that he was not consulted on big decisions at the social media company and that the billionaire had entered into the agreement without knowing about the platform’s “misrepresentations or omissions,” which impacted his perception of the site’s value, according to The Associated Press.

Twitter hit back against the countersuit, saying that the argument was “imagined in an effort to escape a merger agreement that Musk no longer found attractive once the stock market—and along with it, his massive personal wealth—declined in value.”

Updated at 3:26 pm

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Categories
Entertainment

Kevin Spacey ordered to pay $31m to House of Cards producers | kevin spacey

Kevin Spacey has lost his appeal to have a $31m (£25.5m) arbitration award to the producers of House of Cards overturned.

In November, the Hollywood actor was ordered to pay the sum to MCR following “explosive” allegations of sexual misconduct involving young crew members working on the production.

Spacey had filed to have the order overturned, but his request was denied by a US judge in Los Angeles on Thursday, according to documents obtained by the PA Media news agency.

Judge Mel Red Recana wrote that Spacey and his attorneys “fail to demonstrate that this is even a close case” and “do not demonstrate that the damages award was so utterly irrational that it amounts to an arbitrary remaking of the parties’ contracts”.

“We are pleased with the court’s ruling,” MRC’s attorney, Michael Kump, said after the ruling.

The original filings from MCR detailed how Spacey was removed from the hit Netflix show following allegations he was “systematically preying upon, sexually harassing, and groping young men that he had worked with throughout his career on film, television, and theater projects.”

The arbitrator concluded that Spacey had repeatedly breached contractual obligations to provide services “in a professional manner” that were “consistent with [MRC’s] reasonable directions, practices and policies” – including its anti-harassment policies.

The actor starred in House of Cards for five seasons, playing the calculating politician Frank Underwood, before being cut from the show after the allegations surfaced.

In the original ruling, the arbitrator also found that Spacey was not entitled to be paid for the remainder of his contract, as his dismissal had caused the show’s sixth season to be shortened and rewritten and cost MRC millions in lost revenue.

The latest development comes shortly after Spacey appeared in a UK court last month to “strenuously” deny further allegations of sexual assault charges dating back 17 years.

He denied five allegations relating to three men, now in their 30s and 40s, at the Old Bailey in London on 14 July. The alleged offenses are said to have taken place in London and Gloucestershire between 2005 and 2013, during which time Spacey was artistic director of the Old Vic theatre.

Mr Justice Wall set a trial of three to four weeks from 6 June next year, with a further hearing due to take place earlier in 2023.

Spacey is also due to face a civil case, to be heard in New York in October 2022, brought by the actor Anthony Rapp – Spacey’s first public accuser.

Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022: Jemima Montag wins 10km walk, grandmother’s bracelet

Aussie hero Jemima Montag wasn’t alone out there as she powered to an incredible back-to-back Commonwealth Games gold medal in the 10km walk.

The 24-year-old inspired the country all over again as she covered the distance in an incredible time of 42 minutes.

She says she had her own special kind of inspiration hanging on her wrist the entire walk.

An emotional Montag opened up about the special connection she has to her late grandmother through a piece of jewelery that once belonged to the Holocaust survivor after crossing the finish line.

Australian Associated Press reports the bracelet was cut into three pieces two years before Judith’s death with one piece each given to Jemimia and her two sisters.

Montag’s grandmother survived the trauma and terror of Nazi death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau during World War 2.

Judith missed Montag’s special moment on Sunday morning and her competition at last year’s Tokyo Olympics, however, she was there to see Montag win gold on the Gold Coast four years ago.

She said she draws inspiration from reading about her brave grandmother and even tracked down and translated old letters she had from when she was just 12 years old in the Nazi work camp.

“In some of her love letters and journal entries she wrote about just trying to make it through the next hour, the next day, just hoping to meet her dad at the gate with a piece of bread,” Montag said.

“What I take from that is in a race, it’s one kilometer at a time, it’s one step at a time, not thinking about the finish line.

“You just had to have such a careful balance of taking risks and being a little cheeky when it was possible.

“Stealing scraps of food, running from one line to the other if it meant not being put to the gas chamber, and then sticking by the rules, when it was the right thing to do so.”

She said she regularly thinks about some of her grandma’s shattering experiences when looking for that little bit more courage and fight when she is out on the track.

“They marched through snow and cold for days on end in little sandals, and hardly any clothing,” she said.

“She and her sister took their waist bands and tied their wrists together and they said ‘we’re getting through this together or not at all.’

“So just visualizing her walking on ice, not knowing when her next meal would be or if she’d survive.

“This (race walking) is fun and this is something I choose to do and yes, it’s hard, but someone just two generations ago had that level of strength and I know it’s with me now.”

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