Categories
US

Dick Cheney calls Trump a ‘coward’ in ad for daughter’s reelection

Her father’s ad dropped less than two weeks before Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) is set to face a tough challenge from a Trump-backed candidate, attorney Harriet Hageman, in her Aug. 16 primary. Cheney has raised millions as her national profile balloons, but it might not be enough to take on Trump and his advisers from him, who have poured money and energy into her takedown of her.

The former president’s wrath began when Cheney joined nine other House Republicans in voting to impeach him after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Her role as a vocal Trump critic cost Cheney her GOP leadership position, and she was censored by Wyoming’s Republican Party and the Republican National Committee.

Trump’s targeting of Cheney grew more intense when she agreed to serve as the top Republican on the House Jan. 6 select committee, where she was the breakout star during a series of revealing hearings about the former president and his inner circle in the days leading up to the attack. In the rup-up to her primary role, the Wyoming Republican has only leaned into her newfound role as the face of the anti-Trump GOP.

“Lynne and I are so proud of Liz for standing up for the truth, doing what’s right, honoring her oath to the Constitution, as so many in our party are too scared to do so,” Dick Cheney said in the ad, referring to his wife. “Liz is fearless. She never backs down from a fight. There is nothing more important she will ever do than lead the effort to make sure Donald Trump is never again or the Oval Office and she will succeed.”

Categories
Business

Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, NAB to close dozens of suburban branches, with fears for 100 jobs

Dozens of major bank branches across Australia are set to close within months, with the finance union expecting more than 100 jobs to be cut.

A total of 37 branches are confirmed to close over the next few months.

Watch more on the RBA raising interest rates in the video above

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What does it mean for customers and jobs?

Westpac Group has made the most significant slash, with 24 branches set to shut nationwide.

The group says the “majority” of employees will be unaffected by the move and will go on to other jobs within the company.

Chief customer engagement officer Ross Miller said the closures are an investment in how customers are choosing to bank.

“Declining customer use of branches means that, in some instances, we may take a difficult decision to leave a branch location,” Miller told 7NEWS.com.au, adding Westpac Group services more than five million digitally active customers.

“In these instances, we continue to support our customers with access to banking services via Bank@Post, telephone, mobile and virtual banking.”

Miller said customers will be notified in advance about the changes and will be directly connected to the services they will need to continue to bank.

He said there was a “robust process” in place to help employees find new opportunities within Westpac Group, meaning “the majority of employees affected secure a new role and continue their career”.

“As we continue to adapt to our changing customer needs, this will result in new opportunities for our employees within the Westpac Group as we grow our phone, digital and virtual offerings,” he said.

Westpac Group is closing 24 branches across Australia as it shifts to digital. Credit: AAP

NAB has confirmed it is closing nine branches, and vowed no employees would be cut.

“As more and more customers are choosing to bank online, we’ve made the difficult decision to close some branches,” personal banking executive Krissie Jones told 7NEWS.com.au.

“The branch teams have begun talking to customers about alternatives available such as Bank@post, mobile bankers, home lending specialists or business bankers who they can meet in person or via phone or video link.”

Jones said employees at closing branches will be offered jobs at other branches or elsewhere throughout the organisation.

“There will be no job losses as a result of any branch closure and we will still be there for our customers, just in different ways,” she said.

Australian Banking Association chief executive Anna Bligh says banks are investing in new digital services to meet the needs of customers, who have shifted towards online banking.

“Banks remain committed to providing banking services to every Australian, especially those in regional and remote areas,” she told 7NEWS.com.au.

“Despite more than 80 per cent of Australians preferring to do their everyday banking online, banks still have thousands of branches across the country, in addition to the banking services that banks pay to make available in 3500 Australia Post outlets.

“There will be a place for physical bank branches in Australia well into the future, but Australians are embracing digital banking with their arms wide open.”

NAB has vowed no jobs will be lost in the branch closures. Credit: JOEL CARRETT/AAPIMAGE

While the banks say they are committed to supporting workers transition to new roles, the Finance Sector Union expects 182 Aussies to lose their jobs as the closures reach “crisis point”.

“This latest list of closures means the big four have closed more than 550 bank branches across Australia since January 2020,” national secretary Julia Angrisano told news.com.au.

“We must act to stop the banks walking away from communities in our suburbs and towns.

“It’s time to examine the impact of these closures which have hit hundreds of communities across the country.”

Customers at all the banks will continue to be able to access Bank@post at Australia Post Offices.

The full list of branch closures

WA

  • Westpac: Mandurah, South Perth

SA

  • Bank SA: Munno Parra, St Peters

VIC

  • Westpac: Braeside, Whittlesea, Werribee, Lilydale
  • Bank of Melbourne: Croydon, Coburg, Fitzroy, Sunbury, Footscray, 114 William St Melb, Mornington
  • NAB: Mornington
  • CBA: Drysdale, Woodend

NSW

  • Westpac: Lakemba, Engadine, Corrimal, Kingscliff
  • St George: Five Dock
  • NAB: Lavington, Narrandera, Corrimal, Figtree, Cronulla, Maroubra
  • CBA: Annandale, Toongabbie, Lindfield

QLD

  • Westpac: Ashmore, Nerang, Rockhampton
  • NAB: Wynnum

NT

Footage captures bear ringing doorbell.

Footage captures bear ringing doorbell.

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Categories
Entertainment

Lou Wall: the 10 funniest things I have ever seen (on the internet) | comedy

Oh, internet… my best friend, my arch nemesis, my ride or die. We’ve been together for as long as I can remember, I am after all, a Gen Z. (Cusp, don’t question it!)

As a certified purveyor of fine memes, the internet makes up nine-tenths of my personality. I would rather tell you my pin number than reveal my clocked screentime hours. I genuinely search YouTube fail videos to help cure my assortment of (probably internet-fueled) mental illnesses and my everyday conversation consists of so many acronyms and TikTok soundbites that I advise all future lovers to open a permanent Urban Dictionary tab. PSA, you may also need to do that after reading this article!

Now, while the aforementioned traits may scream RED FLAG, or give you the instant ick, I can assure you this, if my extreme internet usage has given me one thing, it’s the ability to heal an immaculate list of hilarious internet content. So without further ado, please allow me to Ctrl + V the funniest shit I’ve seen on the world wide web.

1. How Animals Eat Their Food

This video dropped on my 16th birthday and I remember walking around school insisting that my friends, teachers and even the school gardener watch what I then deemed to be “the funniest video ever”. In hindsight, do I regret that title and is this a cheugy video to start off with? And it is. Will I decide whether we can be friends based on your reaction to this video? Also yes. The pinnacle of 2013 YouTube comedy and the birthday treat that keeps on giving, please enjoy the simple pleasures of How Animals Eat Their Food.

2. Is this available? (Attorney General) Internet Drama Part 1

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There is nothing juicier than Facebook Marketplace beef. Lubalin has taken this real-life internet interaction and turned it into a musical comedy masterpiece. The beats, the plot development, the twist!? I’m declaring musical comedy funny again.

3. This dog rug listing on Facebook Marketplace

“Tragedy plus time equals comedy,” I whisper to myself nervously as I link you to this travesty of a Facebook listing.

4. James Acaster on British Bake Off

In lockdown one I decided that I should make gnocchi from scratch and, let me tell you, they came out so wet and hard the only accurate description I can give you is that they tasted like “river rocks”. Anyway, this video makes my kitchen nightmare look like Attica. I’m pretty sure I contracted food poisoning simply viewing this but comedian James Acaster struggling through a string of mental breakdowns while attempting to make flapjacks will never not be iconic.

5.Flat Earth Conference

I have a special place in my heart for conspiracy theorists. My dream is to one day own a pizzeria called Flat Earth Pizza’s just for the demographic of customers it would attract and the wild conversations I would have. For now I will make do with this report from a flat earthers’ conference – bonus points for the freestyle rap.

6. The Kids Write Jokes Twitter account

What is blue and falls from the sky?

A drunk snail

— Kids Write Jokes (@KidsWriteJokes) July 24, 2022

I know I screamed earlier about being a Zoomer and being “one with the internet” but I truly have nothing on iPad kids. Generation Alpha – those born 2010-24, yes I am vomiting in millennials – will be the funniest of all time. With their evolved texting thumbs and Google glasses, they are coming for the jugular. This Twitter page features genuine joke attempts by children and, let me say, my career in standup comedy is quaking.

7. Ziwe: Baited interview with Matt Rogers

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Ziwe will be president of the world one day. Please enjoy this perfect segment of her de ella baiting her white friends into racist aphorisms.

8. Sylvanian Drama on TikTok

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I actually don’t have the articulation skills to define what makes this TikTok so funny so, if you don’t understand this, I’m sorry for your loss.

If you pissed away your precious youth watching Glee and/or trying to belt a high C, consider this your safe space. Yes, it’s a Facebook group where everyone pretends to be rehearsing for the same musical amateur. Way too much of my lockdown was spent here. You’re welcome.

10. This Tiktok jumpscare

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Number 10 should probably have been my grandma’s close-friends Instagram stories (yes, you heard right) but that is for a selected crowd only and we are a queen who seeks privacy around her meme selection. In lieu, here is a simple yet perfect TikTok.

Categories
Sports

All Blacks v South Africa: Coach Ian Foster says team has ‘got to be smart’ to beat the Boks

The simplistic view is that the All Blacks just have to meet Boks force with Kiwi might and they can secure the victory they so desperately need in the Rugby Championship opener in Mbombela on Saturday (early Sunday NZT).

But coach Ian Foster – more than likely battling to save his national coaching career in these back-to-back contests in the republic – knows better.

After naming a side featuring four changes from the series decider against Ireland, including a minor bombshell at hooker where Samisoni Taukei’aho gets just his second start in the biggest test of his short career, he made it clear that brainpower would be every bit as important as horsepower in this opening matchup.

This is not your typical New Zealand-South Africa test, however.

That’s for the simple reason that the All Blacks are mightily struggling for form, cohesion and confidence, having lost four of their last five, suffered a rare home series defeat in July and not made this visit since 2018 (the Boks, would you believe, haven’t beaten the New Zealanders on their home deck since 2014).

Foster has responded by tweaking his lineup slightly, bringing in the more dynamic power game of the Chiefs hooker, starting Angus Ta’avao at tighthead prop in the absence of Nepo Laulala and Ofa Tuungafasi, moving Scott Barrett back to lock with Brodie Retallick out, and handing a fit-again Caleb Clarke his first test start since his sensational debut season in 2020.

It’s an All Blacks pack with plenty of experience – a combined 387 caps, compared to South Africa’s 449 – but light on runs on the board across the front row.

All Blacks coach Ian Foster has unveiled his team to battle the Boks in the Rugby Championship opener.

MONIQUE FORD/Stuff

All Blacks coach Ian Foster has unveiled his team to battle the Boks in the Rugby Championship opener.

Ta’avao, Taukei’aho and sophomore loosehead George Bower look set for a brutal examination up front. They’re also a group still searching for a collective might, as badly exposed by the Irish.

A South African journalist asked Foster a slightly loaded question revolving around the Boks being a one-trick pony, but with a very good trick, and his forwards needing to “man up”.

“It’s about the team manning up,” said the coach.

“They’re definitely not a one-trick pony – that’s just a fallacy. But what they do well, they do really well. You don’t become world champions if you’re not proficient in a lot of areas. They’re a great team … but it’s about us not getting too hung up on that and going in with a mindset to play our game.

Ian Foster wants his players to mix brainpower and horsepower when they run out against South Africa in Mbombela.

Darren England/AAP

Ian Foster wants his players to mix brainpower and horsepower when they run out against South Africa in Mbombela.

“There is an edge, we know we can play better, but you do that by honing down and getting excited about playing how we want to play.

“So, manning up? We’ll always man up. That’s not the issue. You’ve got to be smart, you’ve got to be physical and you’ve got to have a pretty good combination of both.”

Foster was also asked about any “angst” the All Blacks took in to Saturday’s first appearance in the town formerly known as Nelspruit.

“There’s been a lot of reflection from our players, on their roles, their performances… it has created an edge in the week, and then you dovetail that with where we are and who we are playing and it’s a great concoction.”

The All Blacks coach didn’t want to get into too much detail around the coaching shakeup.

He’s now hands-on with the attack, and new face Jason Ryan has command of the big men after the mid-year firing of John Plumtree and Brad Mooar.

“You’d probably write it up as just an old voice saying the same old stuff,” he responded a little cryptically to the Kiwi scribe’s question on the subject.

“Much is made of the last series, but we were in the process of putting blocks in place. Did we get everything right? No, but we’ve got a lot of faith in areas where we want to grow our game. There are tweaks in attack we’re working on, but some are just focus points we didn’t get right in the last series.”

Hooker Samisoni Taukei'aho gets just his second test start against the Springboks in Mbombela this weekend.

Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

Hooker Samisoni Taukei’aho gets just his second test start against the Springboks in Mbombela this weekend.

In terms of Taukei’aho’s dramatic promotion, with Codie Taylor playing the price for an off-key July with omission (Dane Coles comes off the bench), Foster said the 24-year-old Tonga-born hooker had earned this crack.

“He’s uncomplicated. We don’t believe he gets over-awed on big occasions and he’s been a big mover the last 12 months. Physicality is not his only purpose, but it is a key strength.

“We’ve got three good hookers. Dane has an energy about him and we feel his experience of him in that latter part of the game is going to be key.

The pack selection, added Foster, had been a mix of turning to established combinations (Taukei’aho and Ta’avao are Chiefs team-mates, Barrett and Whitelock are second-row regulars for franchise and country) and rewarding form.

“We had a good look at Akira [Ioane]. We liked his growth last year. He came in for the third [Irish] test, and we felt he did some really good things. He’s a big, physical man, but he’s going to need to be.”

And Clarke’s return was a no-brainer.

“We need to get a ball in his hands, and we need to get him involved. If that happens there will be more good moments than bad ones.”

Not so much time to man up, as play well.

All Blacks: Jordie Barrett, Will Jordan, Rieko Ioane, David Havili, Caleb Clarke, Beauden Barrett, Aaron Smith; Ardie Savea, Sam Cane (capt), Akira Ioane, Scott Barrett, Sam Whitelock, Angus Ta’avao, Samisoni Taukei’aho, George Bower. Reservations: Dane Coles, Ethan de Groot, Tyrel Lomax, Tupou Vaa’i, Shannon Frizell, Finlay Christie, Richie Mo’unga, Quinn Tupaea.

Categories
Australia

Somerton Man sleuth Nick Pelling steps up efforts to shed light on life of Carl Webb

When news articles refer to amateur sleuths who’ve dedicated time and effort to investigating the Somerton Man mystery, they’re referring to people like Nick Pelling.

The 57-year-old London-based computer programmer, author and researcher has never set foot in Adelaide, let alone on Somerton beach.

But that hasn’t stopped him from pursuing the case with the tenacity that one would expect from someone with his skills.

His blog Cipher Mysteries is a testament to his capacity to trawl through undigested records like those on Trove, the National Library of Australia’s freely accessible digital archive.

“History is a funny old thing,” he said.

“The stuff in archives is the stuff that didn’t get thrown away that day — it’s the stuff that survived somehow, just randomly.

“As a historian, you have to merge different types of evidence together because you only have scraps.”

A balding man wearing a headset, blue shirt, a lanyard around his neck.
Mr Pelling, pictured in 2014, shares his research into enigmatic cases at his blog Cipher Mysteries.(YouTube: Gamification World)

The Somerton Man is not the only enigmatic case to have captured Mr Pelling’s attention — but it is the one that has most recently made headlines.

Last week, Adelaide-based academic and long-time Somerton Man devotee Derek Abbott announced that he and a US-based colleague had solved the mystery.

They identified the man as Carl “Charles” Webb, a Melbourne-born engineer.

The breakthrough has spurred Mr. Pelling to uncover more.

He believes the Webb hypothesis is a compelling one, and he wants to find evidence to corroborate it.

The beach at Somerton Park in Adelaide with houses behind a rocky shore and sand.
The beach at Somerton Park, pictured in 2018, where the Somerton Man’s body was found 70 years earlier.(ABC News: Carl Saville)

“My best-case scenario is that we find a picture of Carl Webb. He was married – people have wedding photos, it’s a big day,” he said.

“We may be able to find more records of what Carl Webb was doing in the year-and-a-half after he left his wife and before he died [in 1948].

“It’s not that long ago in the bigger scheme of things.”

Detective work and the Da Vinci Code

An open red suitcase with a white tag with numbers, its contents, including boot polish, strewn on the floor.
A suitcase and belongings found at Adelaide Railway Station are believed to have belonged to the Somerton Man.(Supplied)

For Mr Pelling, discovery is as much about pathways as epiphanies — the investigator never knows how much treasure is awaiting excavation.

“The idea of ​​Dan Brown and his ilk is that the archivist finds … one document that explains everything — it’s never like that,” Mr Pelling explained.

“[But] if you can ask the right questions of the right people, then all kinds of things open up.

“Things like photographs and diaries and journals all persist in attics and lofts.”

Over the years Mr Pelling has corresponded with Australian-based experts, including retired detective Gerry Feltus, who praised Mr Pelling’s endeavours.

“He’s got a massive website going, and people from all over the world have been contributing to that,” Mr Feltus said.

A head shot of an older grey-haired man, wearing a purple shirt, gray jacket.  Mannequins of police behind him.
Retired detective Gerry Feltus authored the book The Unknown Man: A Suspicious Death at Somerton Beach.(ABC Australian Story)

Methodical by nature, Mr Feltus is withholding judgment on the Somerton Man’s identity until police and Forensic Science SA complete their own investigations.

“They are both working on it at this stage,” he said.

“Because of what I know and what I believe, I’m just not prepared to sit back and say I’m satisfied that the person is Webb.

“If it comes back as being Webb, I’d have to say that’s great news, simply because it would clarify a lot of matters.”

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Categories
US

Alex Jones caused $4 million in damages to two Sandy Hook parents, jury finds

The award from the jury was far less than what the plaintiffs, Scarlett Lewis and Neil Heslin, had asked for. At the start of the trial, attorneys for Lewis and Heslin asked the jury to award their clients $150 million in compensatory damages.

A separate, shorter trial during which punitive damages will be discussed is now expected. Punitive damages are awarded when the court finds the defendant’s behavior to be especially offensive.

Mark Bankston, an attorney for the parents, told CNN that the plaintiffs are happy with the jury’s decision, noting that they had also received money prior to the trial due to sanctions the court had hit Jones with.

“Having already secured $1.5 million in fines from Mr Jones, the plaintiffs are now due $5.6 million that Alex Jones will have to pay them,” Bankston said.

“Neil and Scarlett are thrilled with the result and look forward to putting Mr. Jones’ money to good use,” Bankston added. “Mr Jones on the other hand will not sleep easy tonight. With punitive damages still to be decided and multiple additional defamation lawsuits pending, it is clear that Mr Jones’ time on the American stage is finally coming to an end.”

An attorney for Jones could not immediately be reached for comment.

The decision from the jury is a partial ending to a years-long process that began in 2018 when Lewis and Heslin sued Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems, which is the parent of the right-wing media organization Infowars.

Jones baselessly said in the aftermath of the Sandy Hook shooting, in which 26 people were killed, that the incident was staged. Facing multiple lawsuits, Jones later acknowledged the shooting occurred. He testified in court this week that he now believed it to be “100% real.”

Opinion: The scariest part of the Alex Jones story

But Jones failed to comply with court orders during the discovery process of the lawsuit. His failure to do so led to Heslin and Lewis winning default judgments against Jones.

Judge Maya Guerra Gamble ruled in October that Jones was legally responsible for inflicting emotional distress on Heslin and Lewis. Gamble also ruled that Jones was liable for defaming Heslin.

Jones claimed in his testimony that a jury award of just $2 million would destroy him financially.

But the accountant who is now in charge of overseeing Jones’ company Free Speech Systems, the parent of his conspiratorial media outlet Infowars, testified in bankruptcy court Wednesday that Jones withdrew about $62 million dollars from the company over 14 years, of which about $30 million was paid to the IRS.

And the accountant testified that Infowars had received about $9 million in cryptocurrency donations and that “they went directly to Mr. Jones.”

The decision to punish Jones in such terms also comes at a seismic moment in American society, where the lies and conspiracy theories have flourished in recent years.

The jury’s decision, while far lower than what the plaintiffs’ attorneys had asked for, sends a message to those who propel lies into the public conversation, whether for political power or financial gain, that there can be consequences for such behavior.

“Speech is free, but lies you have to pay for,” the Sandy Hook family attorneys argued to the jury during their opening statements and closing arguments.

During the trial, Heslin and Lewis offered emotional testimony, telling the jury that the lies pushed by Jones stained the legacy of their son Jesse and tormented them for years.

Fighting back tears at times, Heslin told the jury that Jones, through his conspiratorial media organization Infowars, “tarnished the honor and legacy” of his son. Heslin said that he could n’t “even begin to describe the last nine-and-a-half years of hell” he has endured because of Jones, and described in detail how he fears for the safety of himself and his family. .

In a remarkable moment in court, Lewis spoke directly to Jones, saying she wanted to address him to his face.

“Jesse was real,” Lewis told Jones. “I’m a real mom.”

Lewis told the jury she feels monetary damages were appropriate in the case because she doesn’t believe Jones would otherwise ever stop his behavior.

“There has not been a sincere apology,” she said. “But if there was, ever, I like it to be in a car accident and you run over someone and cause tremendous bodily damage and you look at that person lying on the ground and say, ‘I’m so sorry, I’m so sorry, I’m not accountable for any of the damage I just caused. That’s how I see it.”

Lewis also reflected on what it meant that the trial had to ever take place.

“It seems so incredible to me that we have to do this,” Lewis told Jones. “That we have to implore you — not just implore you, punish you — to get you to stop lying…It is surreal what is going on in here.”

The trial in Texas is one of three that is expected to play out over the next couple of months.

A different group of Sandy Hook families sued Jones in Connecticut. Those families also won a default judgment against Jones and a trial was scheduled to begin in September. But jury selection was suspended the same day it started earlier this week and the trial could be delayed because of a bankruptcy filing from Free Speech Systems.

Attorneys representing some Sandy Hook families have accused Jones of having drained Free Speech Systems of assets in recent years as part of an effort to protect himself from potential judgments he may be ordered to pay.

One of the attorneys, Avi Moshenberg, told CNN on Tuesday that the bankruptcy filing made by Free Speech Systems indicated that $62 million in assets had been withdrawn from the company in 2021 and 2022.

“If you look at the bankruptcy filing, leading up to the declaration of bankruptcy, Alex Jones, the sole owner [of Free Speech Systems], took $62 million in draws in 2021 and 2022,” Moshenberg told CNN. “Just straight up draws. That’s why the company has few assets.”

— CNN’s Sonia Moghe contributed reporting.

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Categories
Business

UK braces for long recession after biggest interest rate hike in 27 years, ASX to open flat

Australian shares are likely to start the day relatively flat, after the Bank of England announced its biggest interest rate hike in 27 years and warned of a long recession for Britain.

ASX futures were up 0.1 per cent, to 6,891 points, by 8:40am AEST.

The Australian dollar was trading at 69.6 US cents, after rising 0.2 per cent overnight. This was largely due to a weaker US greenback.

It follows a lackluster session on Wall Street, which saw the Dow Jones index fall 0.3 per cent, to 32,727 points, the S&P 500 lose 0.1 per cent, to 4,152, and the Nasdaq Composite gain 0.4 per cent, to 12,721.

“The market is looking for direction after a strong bounce that highlighted the deep pessimism that had permeated the markets,” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment strategist at BMO Wealth Management.

“Many signs indicate that [US] inflation has peaked and the question now turns to how quickly it will come down or whether stickier components will keep it higher than the Fed [Federal Reserve] is comfortable with.”

Recession fears were also on the minds of oil traders, and the possibility this could sink energy demand, as crude prices dropped to their lowest level since before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February.

Brent crude plunged 3.6 per cent, to $US93.34 a barrel.

Spot gold jumped 1.5 per cent to a one-month high of $US1,792 an ounce.

Recession for the UK

Britain’s central bank raised interest rates by 0.5 percentage points on Thursday evening (AEST), its biggest increase since 1995.

This was despite the BoE warning that a long recession was on its way, as it rushed to smother a rise in inflation which is now expected to peak at 13.3 per cent in October — up from its previous forecast of 11 per cent.

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Categories
Entertainment

Gay son tells of shock as he discovers his ‘homophobic’ dad on Grindr

Young Australian man Jacob says his father disowned him when he came out as gay – so imagine his shock when he came across his married, “homophobic” father on the hookup app Grindr.

Jacob revealed the bizarre tale on Kyle Sandilands and Jackie O’s radio show, explaining that he’d been scrolling through profiles when he came across a photo of a man’s torso – with no head shown in the picture – and thought he noticed something a little familiar .

WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Moment Kyle asks Jackie O to be godmother

For more Real Life related news and videos check out Real Life >>

“They have one of those ensuites that are through the walk-in closet,” he told the surprised radio duo.

“I thought, that looks sort of like my parents’ house.

“I clicked through the profile to see if it could be my dad.”

Jacob explained that his mum and dad had been happily married for 27 years and he had never seen any sign of a “rift” in their relationship.

Thinking what he’d discovered may be a fake profile, he decided to engage with the user to see if it really was his dad.

“I wasn’t flirting with him, I just engaged in normal conversation, told him I liked his picture and asked where he is from,” Jacob explained.

“Then I asked for a picture of his face – when he felt it through it was my dad.”

Kyle and Jackie O. Credit: Supplied

Jacob said he was now faced with a difficult dilemma.

Should he tell his mum? Should he confront his dad about him?

“I am very open and forward-thinking, I don’t care if he is gay, I just don’t want him lying to mum,” he said.

Despite his father disowning him when he told his parents about his sexual orientation, they eventually reconciled.

Now, he said he wanted to talk to his father and “get his story.”

“I want to know why he has been hiding it from me for so long,” he said.

“He was super against it when I was coming out.

“He hated me.

“He was super angry and didn’t want anything to do with me in his life.”

A Grindr logo seen displayed on a smartphone. File image. Credit: SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Jacob asked those listening in to the radio segment for advice.

What should I do?

The overwhelming response was that Jacob should sit down with his parents and discuss what he had found out – as difficult as that might be.

“You have to discuss this with both your parents, they have to be aware,” one caller advised.

Another listener said the same thing had happened to his partner.

“My partner had a similar thing happen, his dad had six kids, was a construction manager and appeared happily married,” the caller said.

“Your dad will be happier if he can be true to his real identity, and your mum deserves the chance to be happy too.”

The man was looking at Grindr when he came across a photo of his dad. File image. Credit: Getty

A third caller suggested Jacob speak to his father first, then his mum, rather than addressing the issue with them both at the same time.

One man revealed that he had found gay magazines in his dad’s car and followed him after work one day.

“I found out what he was doing in the evening,” the man explained.

“I spoke to my siblings about it and we realized he had been doing it our whole lives.”

The caller added that his parents were still together after the family had a “sit-down chat” about his father’s sexual orientation.

At the end of the radio segment Jacob told Kyle and Jackie O that he was still feeling undecided about what to do and would have to give it more thought.

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Categories
Sports

Australia’s Grace Brown and Rohan Dennis complete Commonwealth cycling clean sweep | Commonwealth Games 2022

As Grace Brown was preparing for the first leg of an Australian clean sweep of the Commonwealth Games individual time trials, the task ahead was brought into harsh focus. English rider Hayley Simmonds, a bronze medalist on the Gold Coast four years ago now working as a commentator while injured, perfectly articulated the demands of the event.

“It’s called the race of truth,” Simmonds said on the BBC. “In the end, it’s just you and the pain in your legs and thoughts in your head. You cannot hide behind your teammates. It is literally the strongest rider who will win.”

By midway through Thursday afternoon on a complex course in the Black Country, Wolverhampton, the evidence was clear. Brown was the strongest woman by far. And Rohan Dennis, twice a world champion in the discipline, was finally the Commonwealth champion after posting a time of 46:21.20, with his early strength and speed critical.

In both races, English riders finished second. But that is generous to silver medalists Anna Henderson and Fred Wright. In reality there was daylight behind the Australian champions. Both gold medalists had plenty of time in the latter stages of the time trial to consider their thoughts.

Brown coasted home more than 33 seconds clear and Dennis eased late when triumphant over a field including 2018 Tour de France champion Geraint Thomas by just over 26 seconds.

While Australia’s netballers suffered a shock loss to Jamaica on day seven of the Birmingham Games, Brown and Dennis rode superbly to justify their favouritism. Watching Brown, who finished fourth in the Tokyo Olympics, over the course as she reeled in rival after rival was like watching Pac-Man mow down the ghosts in the classic arcade game. The 30-year-old chewed them up and charged on in pursuit of the next target on the way to a winning ride of 40:05.20 over the weaving, hilly and tactically complex 28.8km course.

“The team didn’t tell me I was ahead until the last five kilometers, so I assumed no news was good news,” she said.

Rohan Dennis storms round the course in West Park in Wolverhampton.
Rohan Dennis storms round the course in West Park in Wolverhampton. Photograph: David Davies/PA

Brown came to cycling later than most. Raised in the Victorian town of Camperdown, the gateway to the Otway Ranges and Great Ocean Road, she headed off to boarding school in the big smoke as a teenager.

In Melbourne she was an outstanding athlete. Long distances were her from her go from her. She was quick enough to compete at a national level, but her body was not designed for the rigors of long-distance running, with niggles and injuries ultimately frustrating her.

But her discipline to training, combined with the independence gleaned from leaving home early, served Brown well when she jumped on a bike in her early 20s. She drew fans with her aggressive, attacking riding and the wins at professional level started flowing. So strong a rider has the Australian become, Brown was the clear pick to win here.

Well before she crossed the line, it was clear the pre-race favorite was riding extremely well. As she said afterwards, she did was able to do what was expected of her. “I had the target on my back. I tried not to take on too much of the pressure of being the favourite, just staying calm and focusing on what I had to do,” she said.

Dennis claimed a silver medal at the event in Glasgow in 2014, a year he won the first to two successive world championships in team time trials. He added individual successes to his distinguished resume with successes in Innsbruck and Yorkshire in 2018 and 2019. Last year he won bronze in Tokyo. But he wanted to stand alone atop the podium with a gold medal in a major Games. Desperately.

“I’ve finally got that top step. It’s taken [me] 12 years since Delhi. The Olympics was my first individual medal at an Olympic Games, so it is hard to beat,” he said. “But it is a different feeling being on that top step. It is a little hard to compare. It is special, either way.”

Madison de Rozario claimed gold in the women's T53/54 1500m final on day seven.
Madison de Rozario claimed gold in the women’s T53/54 1500m final on day seven. Photograph: Luke Walker/Getty Images

At Alexander Stadium, para-wheelchair star Madison de Rozario claimed a second gold medal of the Games when adding the T54 1500m to her success in the marathon last week in a thrilling race.

The 28-year-old, who also completed the double on the Gold Coast four years ago, was able to hold off compatriot Angie Ballard in a tactical race when becoming the first Australian para-athlete to win four Commonwealth Games gold medals.

Australian world champion Eleanor Patterson and compatriot Nicola Olyslagers qualified for Saturday’s final when clearing 1.81m with their first jump. Oliver Hoare also qualified fastest for the men’s 1500m final in the morning session after recording a time of 3:37.57.

But there was disappointment for Stewart McSweyn, who was not able to start after falling ill with the flu. Fellow Australians Kathryn Mitchell and Ash Moloney have also been forced to withdraw due to illness, though Kelsey-Lee Barber is cleared to compete after recovering from Covid-19.

Matty Denny recorded a dominant victory in the men’s discuss after throwing two personal bests to end with 67.26m on his final effort of the night, while Sarah Edminston won a silver medal in the women’s F44 discus, continuing her strong run in international events since 2017 .

Elsewhere, China-born diver Shixin Li claimed a silver medal behind England’s Commonwealth Games flag bearer Jack Laugher in a superb performance in the 1m springboard diving. The 34-year-old recorded an overall score of 437.05 points, 10 points behind the triple Commonwealth Games gold medalist.

And the rhythmic gymnastics team of Lidiia Iakovleva, Alexandra Kiroi-Bogatyreva and Ashari Jesse Gill won silver behind gold medal winners Canada, but ahead of England in third.

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Australia

Brisbane man Sulieni Layt bestowed royal honor as Australia’s first talking chief to the King of Tonga

A Brisbane man has become the first-ever Australian to be installed in the Tongan royal palace in a role that will see him speak on behalf of the island nation’s king.

In an Australian-first ceremony, Brisbane broadcaster and dual citizen Sulieni Layt has been appointed to speak for King Tupou VI.

Out of respect, Tongan royalty and nobles do not speak directly with citizens and vice versa. Instead, they speak through appointed representatives.

While there are dozens of speaking chiefs in the South Pacific island nation, Mr Layt is just the third non-Indigenous person to be given a role within the palace. The other two are from the United States.

Sulieni Layt with hands interlaced in a green park in traditional Tongan clothing.
Mr Layt now has the title of His Majesty’s Chief Attendant.(ABC NewsAlice Pavlovic)

Mr Layt grew up in Queensland, where his family operated a flying school that won a contract to train pilots for Tonga’s national airline.

This is when his passion for the island nation ignited, and when he learned from the trainee pilots what would soon be his second language.

“They were always speaking in Tongan and I always wanted to know what they were saying,” Mr Layt said.

“So spending more time with them, I picked up more words and started going to the Tongan church with them.”

Tongan king Tupou VI wearing regal dress and his crown walks towards the camera during his coronation
Tongan King Tupou VI at his lavish coronation in 2015.(Wikimedia Commons)

The 41-year-old dual Tongan and Australian citizen went on to become a key broadcaster in the region for more than 30 years, founding the Pasifika TV and Radio service.

“It hasn’t quite dawned on me yet the significance and the magnitude of today’s ceremony,” he said.

“I’ve worked so many years with our Tongan people. They’re my people and I’ve served His Majesty … for so many years and I wish to continue to do so.”

The role will require him to travel to Tonga to meet the King. He will also be required to travel with and speak for him when he visits Australia.

Historic ceremony attended by Royal Princess

Her Royal Highness the Princess Lātūfuipeka Tukuʻaho with eyes closed.
Her Royal Highness the Princess Lātūfuipeka Tukuʻaho attended the ceremony.(ABC News: Alfred Beales)

His appointment has added significance as the role is usually hereditary.

Mr Layt will now enjoy the official job title of His Majesty’s Chief Attendant and will be officially known as Lave ‘Iloa Ola going forward.

The elaborate chiefly title royal kava ceremony, held at the Brisbane Botanic Gardens yesterday, was the first ever held in Australia, and the first held outside Tonga in 30 years.

COVID-19 restrictions meant the kava ceremony could not be held on palace grounds. At the Botanic Gardens it attracted an audience from across Brisbane’s Pacific Island diaspora.

Tongan community sit on grass in a park as part of a ceremony.
Pacific Islander families gathered to watch Mr Layt be bestowed the royal honour.(ABC NewsAlice Pavlovic)

It involved the ceremonial preparation of kava—a traditional psychoactive drink made from the root of the yoqona plant.

The drink was then presented to the circle, which is usually comprised of the nobles of Tongan clans.

The ceremony was attended by Princess Lātūfuipeka Tukuʻaho in place of King Tupou VI.

A ‘rare and special’ appointment

Sione Maile Molitika stands in a park.
Sione Maile Molitika is president of the Brisbane Tongan Community.(ABC NewsAlice Pavlovic)

President of Brisbane’s Tongan Community, Sione Maile Molitika, said it was an honor to be involved in the ceremony in his home city.

“For something to happen in Brisbane as part of our culture and our custom, it’s very important they can see part of who we are,” Mr Molitika said.

Pasemata Vi Taumisila stands in a field with a flower necklace.
Pasemata Vi Taumisila, daughter of the late noble Lord Ve’ehala, described the appointment as rare and special.(ABC NewsAlice Pavlovic)

Pasemata Vi Taumisila, the daughter of late noble Lord Ve’ehala and a member of the Tonga Traditional Committee – a branch of the royal palace — said the appointment was significant.

“This special occasion is very rare,” she said.

“They only install the title for special people.”

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