Categories
Technology

Emmaline Carroll Southwell: TikToker parts with viral Richmond pad

Children’s author and TikTok star Emmaline Carroll Southwell has sold the Richmond apartment where she made it big in lockdown.

The mother of three and her family became an internet sensation with the murals they created on their home’s floor while stuck at home.

The fabric scenes featured Harper, 12, Levi, 6, and Violet, 4, traveling everywhere from Sydney Harbour, to Abbey Road, and to a Galaxy Far, Far Away.

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She also penned her hit children’s book, Our Family Pledge, at the two-storey abode at 709/8 Howard St, which is under contract for about $1.3m-$1.35m.

“We called it our little pandemic palace, but it was still three kids in a somewhat small place, although it’s pretty large by Richmond standards,” she told Property Confidential.

“Being able to see the city and outside world from the apartment, and feel like you’re still in a place with a pulse, really, really helped.”

The three-bedroom property is next to the Yarra River where Church St becomes Chapel St, with views taking in the neighboring nature and CBD skyline.

Ms Carroll Southwell said lockdown was “little kids and chaos” for her and husband Kenny, and she began the floor murals as a creative person stuck at home and family activity.

“Our little urban oasis has a lot of little stories, so it’s very sad to leave, but it’s definitely the right time for us,” she said.

Whitefox agent Nathan Verwoert said the apartment attracted “a really broad spread” of buyers including young families who “still wanted to be inner city”, with the views a big drawcard.

Ms Carroll Southwell now has more than 600,000 followers on TikTok after downloading it during lockdown. She and her children de ella revealed their family’s “mission statement” by way of a poem on the platform, which became a viral video and then a book deal.

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Originally published as Emmaline Carroll Southwell: TikToker parts with viral Richmond pad

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Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022: Jamaica beat Australia Diamonds in ‘extraordinary’ netball upset, score, result

Jamaica has defeated Australia for the first time in Commonwealth Games netball history, springing a shock 57-55 upset to shake up the race for gold.

Both nations went into the hotly anticipated clash undefeated and faced their first proper test to decide the winner of Group A.

There was nothing in it in the first half as the Diamonds and the Sunshine Girls went goal for goal, and Australia took a 30-29 lead into halftime.

Australia dominated the third quarter and took a six-point lead into three quarter time, largely thanks to their control of the midcourt and Gretel Bueta and Steph Wood firing on all cylinders in the shooting circle.

But just as the Aussies looked home and hosed, Jamaica somehow found another gear in the final term and chewed up the deficit in just a handful of minutes to hit the lead.

Bueta was silenced in the last quarter — she finished with 36 goals from 39 attempts, while Wood had 19 goals at 86 per cent shooting.

“How quickly this game has been turned on its head,” legendary Diamonds shooter Cath Cox said in commentary on Channel 7.

“It looked like Australia had taken control and it was all over.”

Jhaniele Fowler was superb at goal shooter for Jamaica in a physical duel with her West Coast Fever teammate Courtney Bruce.

Adelaide Thunderbirds duo Shamera Sterling and Latanya Wilson were outstanding in defense and secured ball at will for Jamaica with countless deflections.

“Extraordinary scenes, the Diamonds defeated for the first time this tournament,” Sue Gaudion said.

Cox said Jamaica’s performance “screamed ‘we can medal at these Games’,” adding Australia appeared to “shut up shop” in the last quarter.

“Australia couldn’t win the ball back — it was some brilliant defensive work from Jamaica. They really just lifted another level in the fourth quarter,” she said.

The two-point victory was Jamaica’s first over Australia in Commonwealth Games history and will seriously shake up the race for the medals.

It’s far from disaster for Australia, but they will now likely come up against England in the semi-finals on a more difficult path to the gold medal match.

Australia’s last Commonwealth Games netball gold medal came in Glasgow in 2014. The Diamonds claimed silver on the Gold Coast in 2018 after losing a thrilling final to England.

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Categories
Australia

Likely debris from a SpaceX capsule found in Australia

SpaceX did not return a request for comment, and typically does not interact with news media.

Local media reports said at least three pieces of debris have been recovered in the mountain range near Australia’s southernmost tip, and according to a statement from the Australian Space Agency, it “has confirmed the debris is from a SpaceX mission and continues to engage with our counterparts in the US, as well as other parts of the Commonwealth and local authorities as appropriate.”

According to NASA’s statement, SpaceX also confirmed the debris is likely to be a part of the Dragon’s trunk. The trunk provides electricity and other necessary services to the main capsule during its time in orbit but is discarded as the main capsule slices back through the thick upper atmosphere on its way home.

“The trunk segment … typically burns up in the atmosphere over the open ocean posing minimal risk to public safety,” according to a statement from the Federal Aviation Administration, which licenses and oversees commercial spaceflight operations in the United States.

“In this case, it likely remained in orbit for more than one year and some pieces of trunk hardware survived to reach the Earth,” the FAA statement reads.

SpaceX operates two types of Dragon spacecraft: one that is designed solely for shuttling food, research and other supplies to the International Space Station, and another, called Crew Dragon, that’s designed for carrying astronauts. The scraps of the Dragon trunk found in Australia were likely part of a spacecraft that carried four astronauts home from the ISS on May 2, 2021, according to NASA.

The Crew-1 astronauts — comprised of NASA’s Michael Hopkins, Victor Glover, Shannon Walker, and Soichi Noguchi, an astronaut with Japan’s space agency — made a safe return aboard the main portion of the capsule, which splashed down off the coast of Florida before being hauled to safety by nearby recovery ships last year.

Members of the public who believe they may have found a piece of space debris can reach out to SpaceX’s recovery hotline at 1-866-623-0234 or at [email protected].

Typically, discarded pieces of space hardware fall to a watery grave in the ocean. But they do sometimes turn up on land.

Last year, for example, what was believed to be a piece of a SpaceX rocket’s second stage — which powers the rocket after the lower first stage expends all its fuel — landed on a farm in Washington state.

SpaceX does not attempt to recover the second stage of its rockets, though it does land, refurbish and refly most of its first-stage rocket boosters, which are the largest part of the rocket and give the initial boost at liftoff. Dragon capsules ride to orbit sitting atop the rockets.

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Categories
US

Taxes emerge as major sticking point with Sinema

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) is not yet on board with the sweeping tax reform and climate package that Senate Democrats hope to vote on this weekend and wants to make changes to the bill to soften the tax hit on manufacturers, according to familiar sources with the negotiations.

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (DN.Y.) is gambling that he can win Sinema over to support the bill by the time senators vote on proceeding to the budget reconciliation package sometime Saturday afternoon.

Sinema wants to exempt US manufacturing companies from the 15 percent corporate minimum tax that Schumer and Sen. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.) agreed to ahead of unveiling the Inflation Reduction Act last week, according to multiple people familiar with issue.

That’s a tough problem to solve because the 15 percent corporate minimum tax is the biggest revenue generating proposal in the package, raising an estimated $313 billion over ten years.

Exempting manufacturing companies from the book minimum tax would cost about $45 billion over ten years, according to one of the lower Senate estimates being floated. Book is a tax accounting term that in effect would make it harder for companies to avoid declaring profit and therefore increase what they would pay in taxes.

Sinema also opposes closing the so-called carried interest loophole that allows asset managers to pay a 20 percent capital gains tax rate on income earned from advising on profitable investments.

And she wants $5 billion in drought resilience funding for her home state, according to a Democratic senator. Politico first reported Sinema’s demand for drought resilience money.

“She’s not there yet,” said one person familiar with the negotiations, who cited her objections to the corporate minimum tax and carried interest closing the loophole.

Sinema declined to answer reporters’ questions when she emerged from her Capitol basement hideaway Thursday afternoon.

A spokeswoman for Sinema declined to comment on any of the details of the negotiations, saying that her boss would wait for the Senate parliamentarian to completely review the legislation.

Schumer told colleagues they will vote on a motion to proceed to the budget reconciliation package Saturday, a sign that he feels optimistic about working out a deal with Sinema.

Other Senate Democrats also feel optimistic. But they’re also anxious the talks could fall apart at the last minute.

The corporate minimum tax that’s emerging as the biggest obstacle is also a big revenue generator in the bill. Establishing a carveout for manufacturers would substantially reduce how much money from the bill would go toward reducing the federal deficit, which is a major priority of Manchin’s.

Sinema is coming under heavy pressure from business leaders in Arizona to oppose the corporate minimum tax.

“In the face of record-high inflation, supply chain backlogs and a major labor crunch, now is not the time to hammer manufacturers with new taxes,” said Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry President Danny Seiden.

“Arizona job creators will continue to urge lawmakers to reject this manufacturers tax and instead focus on policies that encourage job growth and strengthen our state and economic competitiveness,” he said.

The Schumer-Manchin deal would establish a 15 percent minimum tax for corporations with more than $1 billion in annual profits, though it would exempt green-energy and microchip manufacturing tax credits from getting wiped out by that minimum tax threshold.

Republicans say the Democrats’ proposal would hit manufacturing companies especially hard by superseding former President Trump’s 2017 Tax Credits and Jobs Act, which allows a company to fully expense capital expenditures for a given year.

Full spending under the Tax Credits and Jobs Act is due to phase out over the next four years.

Sinema told the Arizona Chamber of Commerce in April that she would be “unwilling to support any tax policies that would put a break on … economic growth, or stall business and personal growth for America’s industries.”

She made clear to senior White House officials and Senate Democratic colleagues early during the negotiations over the budget reconciliation bill that she would not support increasing the 21 percent corporate tax rate, a key achievement of the 2017 tax reform law.

“The entire country knows that I am opposed to raising the corporate income tax. That was true yesterday and it is true today,” Sinema told the Arizona Chamber of Commerce earlier this year.

Republican critics of the Schumer-Manchin deal say that implementing a minimum tax rate that prevented full and immediate expensing of capital expenditures will effectively increase taxes on many corporations.

Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio), who worked closely with Sinema in drafting last year’s $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure law, warned in an op-ed for The Wall Street Journal that it would “essentially” place a “tax on manufacturing.”

He pointed out that the bipartisan Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that nearly 50 percent of the new tax would hit manufacturers.

“Imposing this new tax on US companies, and restricting certain US manufacturers from writing off investment costs immediately, would make America less competitive and drive investments and jobs overseas,” he warned.

Sinema’s request for $5 billion in drought resilience funding could also imperil passage of the bill depending on how it’s structured, especially if it means Arizona will get more water from the Colorado River.

Guaranteeing access to more water to lower-basin states such as Arizona, Nevada and California would come at the expense of upper-basin states such as Colorado, Utah, Wyoming and New Mexico.

“We are facing historic drought in Colorado. The state has had the worst wildfires in our state’s history. There is very little water in the Colorado River. And I think it would be great if we could do something on drought but it has to be something that meaningfully improves the situation in Colorado and in the upper basin of the Colorado River,” said Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), who is up for reelection in November.

He said any drought resilience language must be provide an “enduring solution to the problem, otherwise it’s not worth doing,”

Senate Democratic senators are hopeful that Schumer can work the same magic he did with Manchin and persuade Sinema to support the bill. But they aren’t making any predictions about how she’ll vote Saturday afternoon when the Senate considers whether to begin debate.

“You’ll have to ask her. I have a very optimistic feeling about it but that’s her call from her, ”said Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.).

Categories
Business

Rashays boss Rami Ykmour blames labor shortages for lettuce, beef price rises

The owner of a popular Sydney restaurant chain has launched into a furious “rant” about skyrocketing costs, saying he is now paying $140 for a box of lettuce and can’t afford to pass it on to his customers.

But Rashays co-founder Rami Ykmour, who made headlines during Covid for clashing with police over masks and speaking out against banning unvaccinated diners, says labor shortages – not the floods – are to blame for rising prices.

“I am disgusted, I am really disappointed with what’s going on out there, guys,” the outspoken restaurateur said in a TikTok video.

“Listen to this. We are buying a box of lettuce for $140. How much are we going to pass on to our customers? How can we pass on that expense to our customer? Even the big fast food giants have stopped serving their magic burger because this is worth, what, seven, eight bucks? One head of lettuce?

Mr Ykmour said he “can’t believe this”.

“Guys, just to get lettuce out to our restaurant is costing us so much money there is no way customers will come back if we pass on that cost,” he said, adding beef prices had also “gone through the roof”.

“And you know what they tell us? Let’s blame the floods. You know what I call that? BS,” he said.

“Do you know what the real problem is? The real problem is we’re short labour. The real problem is no one is out there to pick cos lettuce, there’s no one out there to pick iceberg. There’s no one to work in our farms, there’s no one to work in our country abattoirs. That’s why the prices have gone up, but they’re covering up for it.”

He said it was “time the government stepped in and said listen, we’re going to open the gates, we’re going to let people here and we’re going to make it easy for small business to run their business, we’ re going to let people come into the country and work here”.

“Guys, this is getting ridiculous,” he said. “Now ask for something to be done.”

Speaking to news.com.au on Friday, Mr Ykmour insisted labor shortages were responsible for price increases in production.

“I can tell you that first-hand,” he said.

“I was on a lettuce farm in Melbourne last week, they had six people on and usually they have 40 people. [The floods] did contribute in the early days, but it’s got nothing to do with what’s happening today.”

Mr Ykmour said governments needed to once again incentivize people to come to Australia to work, with something similar to the “Ten Pound Poms” scheme after World War II.

“We’re at that level now,” he said.

He said he believed border closures over the past two years had “of course” caused labor shortages, but that the issue was much broader.

“I think people just don’t want to work,” he said. “Coming off the pandemic, people are struggling.”

Recruiters have previously warned Australia is grappling with a massive skills shortage as employers struggle to fill roles.

Graham Wynn from Superior People Recruitment told news.com.au in June that he had “never seen it this bad”.

“This is the worst and most difficult it’s been to find people,” he said, adding it was “across the board”.

“Salespeople, technicians, a bit of IT we’re struggling with as well, but even the more basic roles which don’t require any experience like receptionists, we’re even struggling to find those at the moment.”

Mr Ykmour agreed, saying his business was getting hit with a “double-whammy” as a result.

“It’s [affecting] the price of produce, and we’re getting hit with staff shortages, right from the top level all the way down to waiters,” he said.

“My head office employs 60 people and we’re struggling, it’s just permanent recruitment. What used to take four weeks to find you’re now looking at three months.”

I have argued lockdowns were partly to blame for the general malaise, along with Covid itself.

“I think we’ve trained people to stay at home with lockdowns and all the rest,” he said.

“We’ve told people, listen, it’s OK to stay at home. I reckon a lot of people in the community are mentally drained on the back of the pandemic — people are finding it hard to just survive at the moment.”

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is coming under increased pressure from the states and the business lobby to ramp up immigration to address lingering skills shortages after two years of Covid border closures.

Last year, NSW government bureaucrats urged Premier Dominic Perrottet to push the federal government for an “explosive” post-WWII-style immigration surge that could bring in two million people over five years.

NSW Skills Minister Alister Henskens last month called on the Albanese government to implement a “significant acceleration” of the nation’s skilled migration program, Australian reported.

Australia’s annual inflation rate rose to 6.1 per cent in the June quarter, figures released last week show, the fastest pace since December 1990.

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, the most significant contributors to the 1.8 rise in consumer prices over the quarter were new dwelling purchases, automotive fuel and furniture.

Price rises were also seen across all food and non-food grocery products, “reflecting a range of price pressures including supply chain disruptions and increased transport and input costs”, the ABS said.

Fruit and vegetable prices were up 7.3 per cent compared with the same quarter last year, meat and seafood rose 6.3 per cent, bread and cereal products were also up 6.3 per cent, while dairy and related products increased by 5.2 per cent.

“Fruit and vegetables rose 5.8 per cent [in the June quarter] due to heavy rainfall and flooding in key production areas of NSW and Queensland disrupting domestic supply,” the ABS said.

“Covid – related supply chain disruptions and high transport and fertilizer costs also contributed to the rise. Bread and cereal products rose 3.1 per cent due to constrained global wheat supply.”

The ABS noted meals out and takeaway foods also rose 1.4 per cent “due to rising input costs and ongoing supply and labor shortages”.

“Dining vouchers offered by the NSW and Victorian governments and the Melbourne City Council partially offset the rise,” it said.

“These voucher schemes have the effect of reducing out-of-pocket costs for consumers. Excluding the impact of these voucher schemes, Meals out and takeaway foods rose 2.1 per cent.”

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Categories
Technology

Google is making quoted searches even better

Did you know you can search for an exact word or phrase on Google by putting quotation marks around it? It’s a great way to get specific about something you’re looking for. And on Thursday, Google announced what I think will be a nice improvement: the small snippets underneath a search result link will now be created based on where the quoted term appears on the page.

Google’s blog post about the change has a good image that illustrates how this will work in practice, which I’ve included below. Google googled “google search,” and the two snippets shown in the example both include the bolded phrase “Google Search.”

The Google search results for “google search.”
Image: Google

Previously, Google would show you results that included the quoted word or phrase, but the small snippet under a link may not have shown exactly where the phrase appeared on a page. In the blog post, Google’s Yonghao Jin explains why that was and why it made the change:

In the past, we didn’t always do this because sometimes the quoted material appears in areas of a document that don’t lend themselves to creating helpful snippets. For example, a word or phrase might appear in the menu item of a page, where you’d navigate to different sections of the site. Creating a snippet around sections like that might not produce an easily readable description.

We’ve heard feedback that people doing quoted searches value seeing where the quoted material occurs on a page, rather than an overall description of the page. Our improvement is designed to help address this.

As noted in the blog post, there are a few caveats about quoted searches. Some text may be hidden in a meta description tag or alt text and not be easily visible on a page, for example, or Google may have crawled a page when it contained a quoted term that has since been removed in an update. And Google “mainly” bolds quoted content in webpage snippets on desktop — bolding won’t work for mobile results.

Categories
Sports

Golf: Aussie world No.2 Minjee Lee within striking distance at British Open

World No.2 Minjee Lee took the opening day honors in the British Open super group and is well placed to not only emulate compatriot Cameron Smith but also seize the No.1 ranking.

Lee recovered from a flat start and made three crucial birdies in the last seven holes to finish three shots off the lead as she chases her second major of the year.

Playing with world No.1 Jin Young Ko and No.3 Nelly Korda, Lee was one over par after six holes but turned for home at even par after a birdie on the seventh at Muirfield in Scotland and then began her climb up the leaderboard.

Lee finished the opening day three shots behind former champion Hinako Shibuno in the $10m event and will be back in action on Friday afternoon Australian time with an early second-round tee time for the Open super group.

“I made really quite a few good up-and-downs on the back nine,” Lee said.

“And to be three under the back nine I think is quite good considering how 14 and 15 play really tough.

“The wind got up – it was pretty similar to yesterday when I played in the pro-am – so I think I got a little used to the conditions while I was out there yesterday

“But I feel like I was quite committed on every shot that I hit because it was so windy, and I just think I did that really well today.”

Korda finished two shots back from Lee after opening with a one-under 70, while Ko struggled to five-over after shooting 76.

Steph Kyriacou is the best of the other Australians in the field with a one-under 70, placing her equal 13th.

Hannah Green posted an even-par 71 and Whitney Hillier a one-over 72, but Su-Hyun Oh never recovered from dropping three shots on the opening two holes, finishing with a 77.

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Categories
Australia

Tariffs to cost more to collect than the revenue they raise: Productivity Commission

Trade agreements already in place, plus changes in government policy over the past half-century, mean about 90 per cent of imported goods come into Australia tariff-free. The remaining tariffs hit just 10 per cent of products, mostly on knitted cloth, car parts and furniture.

Tariff revenue is expected to fall further as Australia signs trade deals with Britain, India and the European Union in the coming years.

Former prime minister Scott Morrison and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson last year agreed on the principles of a free trade deal between Australia and Britain.  The deal will reduce tariff revenues by more than $100 million.

Former prime minister Scott Morrison and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson last year agreed on the principles of a free trade deal between Australia and Britain. The deal will reduce tariff revenues by more than $100 million.Credit:Getty Images

The trade deal with Britain is expected to cut tariff revenues by between $106 million and $134 million. A deal with the EU would cut revenues by between $704 million and $774 million.

The decline in revenue will mean the cost of raising tariffs on remaining goods will climb, reaching up to $4.81 for every dollar of tariff revenue.

The commission found businesses importing goods faced significant compliance costs, partly due to the various FTAs ​​Australia is party to, as they “exert effort” to access preferential or concessional rates of customs duty. That effort can include changing how they make goods to qualify for a particular trade deal.

“Compliance costs come in two forms: the costs of the ‘paperwork’ needed to demonstrate eligibility for a preference or concession, and the costs of adapting production to make the imports eligible for the preference,” it found.

“Some foreign producers may adapt their production processes to meet preference eligibility. Australian businesses and consumers bear the increases in costs that this might involve when they are passed along the supply chain.”

Separate research from the commission found overall assistance to businesses jumped by 25 per cent, or $4.2 billion, in 2020-21.

Most of the increase was driven by new spending on COVID-related programs aimed at helping businesses through the pandemic.

Commission deputy chair Alex Robson said the pandemic and the global surge in protectionism over recent years meant there had to be a renewed focus on winding back government handouts.

“During the early stages of the pandemic, government assistance to Australian businesses and households rose. Many needed support at that time. The challenge is to roll back this assistance as conditions improve to avoid overheating the economy,” Robson said.

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“The task now is to make sure every dollar of assistance is efficient, effective and remains absolutely necessary. This includes making sure we aren’t creating trade barriers through costly and obsolete tariffs.”

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.

Categories
US

Brittney Griner: WNBA star sentenced to 9 years in Russian jail for drug-smuggling

Judge Anna Sotnikova of the Khimki city court delivered the sentence and fined Griner 1 million rubles, or about $16,400. She said the court took into account Griner’s partial admission of guilt, remorse for the deed, state of health and charitable activities. Prosecutors had asked that she be sentenced to 9.5 years in jail.

“I never meant to hurt anybody, I never meant to put in jeopardy the Russian population, I never meant to break any laws here,” Griner said. “I made an honest mistake and I hope that in your ruling that it doesn’t end my life here. I know everybody keeps talking about political pawn and politics, but I hope that, that is far from this courtroom.

“I want to say again that I had no attempt on breaking any Russian laws. I had no attempt. I did not conspire or plan to commit this crime,” she added.

After the sentence, Griner told a CNN producer as she left court, “I love my family.”

Russia's war in Ukraine: Live Updates
The verdict comes about six months after the 31-year-old was arrested at a Moscow airport and accused by Russian prosecutors of trying to smuggle less than 1 gram of cannabis oil in her luggage. The two-time US Olympic basketball gold medalist pleaded guilty to drug charges last month and said she accidentally packed the drugs while in a hurry.

Griner’s lawyers, Maria Blagovolina and Alexander Boykov, said in a written statement they will appeal the decision and criticized the court for ignoring their evidence. They have 10 days to appeal.

“We are very disappointed by the verdict. As legal professionals, we believe that the court should be fair to everyone regardless of nationality. The court completely ignored all the evidence of the defense, and most importantly, the guilty plea,” they said in the statement. “This contradicts the existing legal practice. Taking into account the amount of the substance (not to mention the defects of the expertise) and the plea, the verdict is absolutely unreasonable. We will certainly file an appeal.”

Speaking outside court, Boykov said that the average time in jail for this type of crime is five years, adding that almost a third of those convicted get parole.

Griner “is not doing fine today,” said Blagovolina, a partner at Rybalkin, Gortsunyan, Dyakin and Partners law firm. The defense team is hopeful that Griner will be able to talk to her family about her next week. Blagovolina added that Griner will return to the detention center where she is being held.

Sentence comes amid tense US-Russia relations

The harsh sentence comes amid the backdrop of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the country’s saber-rattling with the US and Europe. The US State Department maintains Griner is wrongfully detained, and US officials have offered a potential prisoner swap with Russia in an attempt to bring her home safely.
Charge d’Affairs of the US Embassy in Russia, Elizabeth Rood, said the sentence was a “miscarriage of justice,” and US President Joe Biden said the lengthy sentence was “unacceptable.”
Joe Biden calls Brittney Griner's sentence 'unacceptable'

“Today, American citizen Brittney Griner received a prison sentence that is one more reminder of what the world already knew: Russia is wrongfully detaining Brittney. It’s unacceptable, and I call on Russia to release her immediately so she can be with her wife, loved ones, friends, and teammates,” Biden said in a statement.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken criticized the Russian legal system more broadly, saying the sentence “puts a spotlight on our significant concerns with Russia’s legal system and the Russian government’s use of wrongful detentions to advance its own agenda, using individuals as political pawns.”

He said the US is working to bring home Griner and Paul Whelan, an American citizen who has been held by Russia for alleged espionage since 2018. “This is an absolute priority of mine and the Department’s,” Blinken said.

It’s now “up to the Russian side” on whether Griner’s conviction opens new doors for negotiations of a prisoner swap, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said.

“We’re still open to taking our proposal seriously and positively considered, and if on the Russian side that means they feel like they’re more empowered to do that, then so be it,” Kirby told reporters in Thursday’s White House briefing.

Kirby reiterated the US position remains that it wants Russia to “take the deal on the table because it’s a good one, it’s a fair one, and it’ll help bring Paul and Brittney home.”

CNN National Security Analyst Steve Hall said the harsh sentence was not a surprise and argued that Russia’s court proceedings are not legitimate.

“This is all performance in Russia. There was never any doubt as to what was going to happen,” he said. “What Vladimir Putin is trying to do is basically drive up the bargaining price of Ms. Griner.”

Last week, CNN reported that the Biden administration proposed a prisoner swap with Russia, offering to release a convicted Russian arms trafficker, Viktor Bout, in exchange for Griner and Whelan. Russian officials countered the US offer, multiple sources familiar with the discussions have said, but US officials did not accept the request as a legitimate counteroffer.

The Kremlin warned Tuesday that US “megaphone diplomacy” will not help negotiations for a prisoner exchange involving Griner. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Moscow believes these talks should be “discrete.”

Griner’s WNBA team, the Phoenix Mercury, was playing the Connecticut Sun on Thursday night. Before the game, the teams held a 42-second moment of silence as players linked arms. Near the end of the tribute, spectators started chanting, “Bring her home! Bring her home!” Griner, a six-time WNBA all-star, wears No. 42 for the Mercury.

Earlier, the Mercury released a statement calling the verdict “a sobering milestone in the 168-day nightmare” of her detention.

“We are inspired every day by BG’s strength and we are steadfastly committed to keeping her top-of-mind publicly until she is safely back on American soil. We will not allow her to be forgotten. We are BG,” the statement reads.

Head coach Vanessa Nygaard told CNN the guilty verdict and Griner’s sentence is “unacceptable.”

“It’s just heartbreaking,” the coach said. “To hear her words from her and her apologies from her. Just trying to send love, prayers and strength to her.”

In a joint statement, WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver criticized the verdict and sentence as “unjustified and unfortunate, but not unexpected.”

“The WNBA and NBA’s commitment to her safe return has not wavered and it is our hope that we are near the end of this process of finally bringing BG home to the United States,” they said.

Defense asked for leniency in closing arguments

The court hearing Thursday began shortly after Griner arrived in handcuffs, escorted by Russian officers into the defendant’s cage. Once uncuffed, she spoke with her legal team and then held up a photo of the UMMC Ekaterinburg basketball team, the Russian squad she played for during the WNBA offseason.

In closing arguments, Blagovolina argued that Griner never used marijuana in Russia and that she never had the intention of doing so. She had no need to bring the vape cartridges to Russia, the lawyer added. All this confirms the complete absence of intent in her actions, Blagovolina argued.

Examination of the substance in Brittney Griner's vape cartridges violated Russian law, defense expert says

Even if Griner ever used medical marijuana, it was only at home back in Arizona, rare and only with a doctor’s prescription, she added. She couldn’t have known how strict the laws were in Russia, Blagovolina said.

Boykov also argued Griner had no opportunity to properly examine the court documents. He said that the Russian constitution guarantees everyone the right to use their native language and the free choice of the language of communication.

Boykov cited an instance when a language interpreter provided to Griner flipped through a lengthy document offered by an investigator for translation and then told Griner, “Basically, it means that you are guilty.”

Throughout the trial, Griner’s attorneys have laid out arguments undermining the prosecution’s case and claiming her detention was not handled correctly after she was stopped February 17 by personnel at the Sheremetyevo International Airport.

Her detention, search and arrest were “improper,” Boykov said last week, noting more details would be revealed during closing arguments.

Stopped Americans Fast Facts
After she was stopped in the airport, Griner was made to sign documents that she did not fully understand, she testified. At first, she said, she was using Google translate on her phone from her but was later moved to another room where her phone from her was taken and she was made to sign more documents.

No lawyer was present, Griner testified, and her rights were not explained to her. Those rights would include access to an attorney once she was detained and the right to know what she was suspected of. Under Russian law, she should have been informed of her rights within three hours of her arrest.

On Tuesday, at the seventh hearing in her case, a defense expert testified that the examination of the substance contained in Griner’s vape cartridges did not comply with Russian law. Blagovolina also told CNN her team’s experts identified “a few defects” in the machines used to measure the substance.

At trial, Griner testified that she has a doctor’s prescription for medical cannabis and had no intention of bringing the drug into Russia. Following her arrest of her in February, she was tested for drugs and was clean, her lawyers previously said.

“We continue to insist that, by indiscretion, in a hurry, she packed her suitcase and did not pay attention to the fact that substances allowed for use in the United States ended up in this suitcase and arrived in the Russian Federation,” Boykov, of Moscow Legal Center, has said.

CNN’s Jill Martin, Elizabeth Wolfe, Allie Malloy, Travis Caldwell, Dakin Andone, Kylie Atwood, Evan Perez, Jennifer Hansler, Natasha Bertrand, Carolyn Manno and Frederik Pleitgen contributed to this report.

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Xenoblade Chronicles 3 – Chain Attacks Guide

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Warning: As with all our Xenoblade Chronicles 3 guides, the following article contains spoilers.

There are multiple overlapping systems at work within Xenoblade Chronicles 3’s wonderfully strategic combat system. From returning elements such as auto-attacks, positional attacksclass-based tactics like drawing aggro and performing combos that break and topple your foes, to new stuff like that fancy new interlinking shenanigans that sees you morph into powerful killing machines.

On top of all of this we’ve also got Chain Attackswhich can seem a little bit complicated at first glance, so let’s take a quick look at what makes them tick.

Xenoblade Chronicles 3 – Chain Attacks Guide

As you battle opponents in Xenoblade Chronicles 3 you’ll gradually fill up your Chain Attack Gauge, which is located to the right side of your screen during regular battles, as shown in the pic below. When this is ready it’ll start flashing and a quick press of the “+” button will see you enter the game’s Chain Attack state.

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Once in a Chain Attack you’ll be presented with a Chain Order screen featuring a handful of different characters, each with their own attack order that can be carried out. Browse through these attack orders and have a look at the bonuses that you’ll receive for successfully completing them. For example, if you were to pick Mio’s “Lightning Quick” orderyour bonus will be the reduction of attacker and healer aggro by 100%, as shown in the Completion Bonus details just under the order selection. Noah’s Brave Assault gives attacks a 100% chance to bypass defenses, and so on.

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Successful completion of the order you choose grants you this bonus, and it’s a bonus that will stick for the entire duration of the Chain Attack at hand, stacking with all the others you accumulate. Sweet. Now let’s choose an order, we’re gonna go with Noah because we want that defense-neutralizing bonus, and once we do we’re in the attack proper. Take a look below and you’ll see our available characters in the bottom left of the screen. It’s important to note here that anyone who’s out of commission when you first start a Chain Attack will not be available to use, so think about that when you’re about to kick one off. It’s also important to note that once you use a character that’s them out of the current chain attack, unless they get reactivatedand we’ll have to look at reactivation a little bit later.

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But first, let’s look at our available characters as we enter the attack order. Each one has got numbers above their heads, these are Tactical Points (TP). The number above each combatant’s head is the lowest amount of TP that you’ll accrue for choosing to use them in a turn. What do we need to accrue TP for? Well, in the top right you’ve got a TP Gauge and we need to get that TP gauge over the 99% mark in order to successfully complete the order. So, at it’s most basic, our job here is to choose characters who’ll make that number go to 100% and beyond. Once we’re there, we get to sit back and watch a cool animation as your enemy takes a drubbing. The further above 100% you go, the higher your damage multiplier rises in the bottom right of your screen and the more energy we tear off our foe’s health bar.

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This is where Chain Attacks now start to fold in lots of lovely layers of strategy as you get used to doing them and start to consider, not just the TP numbers involved or bonus you’ll gain, but what attacks you’re performing and how they affect you both during the Chain Attack and afterwards.

If you choose an attacker, you need to consider what attack to use in order to do as much damage as you can, raising the TP as far above that base number as possible. For example, Noah is starting out with a TP of 30 here so that’s our base, but depending on what attack we use, how many times it hits, its position and type, it’ll add a bunch more TP to that total. This may feel complex starting out but you’ll soon get an idea of ​​what attacks do the big numbers.

Further to this, we need to consider other aspects such as healing and buffs. If your party is in bad shape, low on health, you’ll want to pull off healing attacks in order to get your health back up so you come out of a Chain Attack in good shape. In this way – and this is something you can consider once you’re used to the whole thing – you can save up the use of a Chain Attack in battle just to deploy it when you’re in dire need of healing. Healers can also lower your enemy’s defenses and you can raise your team’s defenses also. Lots of things to consider here beyond the TP gauge just filling up.

Now there are a few other rules that will always apply once you’ve chosen a Chain Order and get started on an attack.

Class-Specific Rules

1. Using a character with the same class as the order – check the symbol on the order itself – will ensure you get bonus TP points for their move. For example, Noah’s Brave Assault order has a red attacking sword symbol on it, so using a character with this symbol will net you bonus points.

two. Attacking characters, if chosen first, will always get a 125% multiplier to their TP at the end of their turn.

3. Support characters, such as healers, can’t make the TP gauge go over 99%so you can’t use them to end a round – unless they’re a special Hero who can bypass this. This might seem annoying, but what you can do here is use support characters to safely get right up to 99% without going over and ending the order. Then you can use a character with a high base TP number and choose an attack that’ll do big damage to watch that gauge rocket upwards.

3. Ending an order with a defender (blue shield icon) will guarantee that you’ll reactivate the character with the current highest base TP for your next round. This means you can build a character’s base TP up over multiple turns to really score some big points and jack that damage multiplier up.

reactivation

We mentioned Reactivation earlier. After each successful order you’ll automatically reactivate a character, so you’re getting one person back to bolster how many attempts you’ve got to complete your next chosen order. As we already said, you can also affect who you reactivate by using a defender character to finish an order, giving you the highest base TP member of your team back for the next round.

Further to this, depending on the TP gauge score you end up with at the end of an order, you’ll get more and more reactivated characters back to play with. Score over 100% and you’ll get one character back. Score over 150, you’ll get two, and anything over 200 nets you three teammates to blast into the next round with.

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There are a bunch of other ways to affect reactivation beyond these few parameters, mostly by making sure you’ve got a hero character on your squad, each of whom has a special ability during Chain Attacks. Play around with heroes and remember to choose wisely as you attack in order to max out that gauge and keep the Chain Attack rolling.

Interlink attacks within a Chain Attack can do massive damage and, in order to pull them off, you simply need to complete the Chain Order of two Ouroboros partners. So, for example, complete Lanz’s order and then complete Sena’s order and you’ll find their joint Ouroboros order awaiting you when you return to the order screen. The great thing about these orders, besides all the extra damage they do, is that they reactivate your entire party to join in.

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However, these attacks, once performed, will also end your current Chain Attack, so be aware of this if you want to max out your turns. Further to this, you can also actually perform two Interlink attacks by entering a Chain Attack once your Interlink Level hits 3 during normal battleso raise your Interlink Level up by pulling off fusions, combos and so on then hit that Chain Attack Button once you’re ready.

overkill

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Overkill. This is very straightforward. If you manage to kill an enemy during a Chain Attack that’s not yet completed, you’ll go into Overkill mode which gives you sweet bonus XP gains. You can see these XP gains as a percentage in the bottom right of the screen just above your damage multiplier. Keep completing orders, up until the max allowed, and you’ll keep racking up the XP bonuses. Simple.

Remember to check the in-game guide if you’re confused by any aspect of Chain Attacks and try out some of the tutorials in order to really get a good understanding of everything and you’ll soon be knocking that TP Gauge up over the 500 % mark like an absolute beast. Good luck!


This article is part of our Xenoblade Chronicles walkthrough and guide series. We’ll help you survive your journeys across Aionios with information you’ll need to make the most of the game, such as How To Unlock Traversal Skills (Wall Climbing, Rope Sliding, Scree Walking, Hazard Neutralization), How To Unlock And Upgrade All Heroes And Classes, How To Get Affinity And XP Rewards from Collectopaedia Cards, and How To Unlock The Nopon Coin Xchange.

We’ll also let you know where to find Every Rest Spot Location, All Unique Monster Locations and Every Ferronis Hulk Location, plus All Meal Recipes, Effects & Where To Find Them, and advice on whether you should play the previous Xenoblade Chronicles games before starting XC3.

And finally, you can check out our review and Where to Buy Xenoblade Chronicles on Nintendo Switch, if for some reason you haven’t yet picked up the game!

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