Categories
Sports

AFL 2022: A Buddy shock

The Sydney Swans have expressed confidence about retaining AFL goal-kicking great Lance Franklin, declaring that contract negotiations with the star forward are “tracking well at the minute”.

Before a Channel Nine report linked Franklin with a potential move to the Brisbane Lions, Swans chief executive Tom Harley said the key forward, 35, was “locked in with his footy” and “there’s no hurry from our point of view”.

Sydney Swans superstar Lance Franklin.

Sydney Swans superstar Lance Franklin.Credit:AFL Pictures

Harley’s optimistic tone that Franklin was poised to extend his Sydney tenure came despite the report from Nine in Brisbane, which said the Lions had emerged as a strong contender to gain the veteran superstar’s services.

According to the report, Franklin and his partner Jesinta are keen to move north to Queensland to be closer to family on the Gold Coast.
However, the Swans later indicated that talks between the club and Franklin’s management were “respectfully ongoing.”

Franklin has been a star at the Swans since departing his original club Hawthorn after the 2013 season. He ventured to the Harbor City on a nine-year, $10 million deal amid widespread skepticism that Franklin would play to the end of his deal.

Instead, after 335 matches and more than 1000 goals, he is poised to extend his AFL career into an 18th season.
There were astonishing scenes at the SCG in round two when Franklin booted his 1000th career goal.

Sydney’s management, however, expressed confidence about keeping Franklin.

Swans boss Harley told 3AW the club would love for Franklin “to play for as long as he wants to keep playing”.

Categories
Australia

Fears for safety of disabled student at Walgett Community College

There are fears for the safety of a severely disabled child after an application for him to bypass the town’s only high school due to student violence was rejected.

Walgett resident Xander McKenzie, 12, has hydrocephalus, a condition that means he is tube-fed, in a wheelchair and has a shunt in his brain.

His mother, Kylie McKenzie, formally asked him to stay at the local primary school for another year but the NSW Department of Education denied her application.

He is now required to start at Walgett Community College in 2023.

But Ms McKenzie said her son would be too vulnerable and said Xander’s therapists agreed.

“We’ve been to meetings here before and chairs and tables have come flying over from the second level,” Ms McKenzie said.

“He can’t get out of the way. One knock anywhere between his head and his stomach where he has a shunt place could be life-threatening.”

‘Let common sense prevail’

Walgett is a town already devoid of education options due to its isolated location, almost 300 kilometers away from the nearest inland city, Dubbo.

Zoning regulations dictate children can only attend either of two local primary schools and the only secondary school, which has been plagued with violence.

Ms McKenzie was informed Department of Education guidelines dictated her son had to move to the high school because of his age.

“The Department of Education looks at all disabled children the same,” she said.

A group of women surround a boy in a wheelchair in front of a fenced building
kylie mckenzie [C] says she fears for her son’s safety if he is forced to attend Walgett’s only high school.(ABC News: Olivia Ralph)

Ms McKenzie said it had taken years for Xander to get assistance with staff and modifications to which he now had access.

“We’d like to keep Xander where he is, where he’s happy,” she said.

“The education department has spent a fortune in the last 12 months on provisions at the primary school for him and now they’re telling us he can’t stay.”

She attended a protest during the NSW Education Minister Sarah Mitchell’s visit to Walgett yesterday after not receiving a response to requests for help.

“Let common sense prevail,” Ms. McKenzie said.

“He has a mental age of three years old.”

Big sister’s fears

Xander’s older sister Anicia left Walgett Community College last year after she was assaulted twice at the school, moving away from her family to attend school in central Queensland.

“As his sister who went through trauma here and suffers [poor] mental health from this school, I don’t want him — a vulnerable person with severe disabilities — to go to a school like this,” the 16-year-old said.

Three women stand in a circle talking on a sidewalk
NSW Education Minister Sarah Mitchell speaks to protesters outside Walgett Community College.(ABC News: Olivia Ralph)

“If there’s a fight and he’s near that fight and gets bumped, I might not have a brother anymore.

“I want the minister to listen to how terrible the school has gotten over the years.”

Meeting with the minister

Education Minister Sarah Mitchell met Xander and spoke with his family when they attended the protest in Walgett.

“It’s now about me going to see what other things can we put in place for Xander, how can we make sure he’s supported,” Ms Mitchell said.

“I’ve already given an undertaking to his family that I will come back to them and work with him to see what options we’ve got, so Xander can continue to have great opportunities and get that love and support that he so clearly has from his family and from his community.”

A boy in a wheelchair sitting next to a woman standing and smiling
Xander meets with Education Minister Sarah Mitchell.(Supplied: Kylie McKenzie)

She commended Anicia for advocating for her little brother.

“I was really impressed by how strong these young people were in their advocacy for their community, particularly in relation to Xander and to meet his sister, mother and grandmother,” she said.

“It was really wonderful for me to meet them and understand.”

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Categories
US

Dick Cheney torches Trump in ad: ‘He’s a coward’

Rep. Liz Cheney with her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney, at his house in Virginia after she was ousted from her GOP leadership role on May 12, 2021.

Rep. Liz Cheney with her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney, at his house in Virginia after she was ousted from her GOP leadership role on May 12, 2021. (David Hume Kennerly/Center for Creative Photography/University of Arizona via Getty Images )

In a new campaign ad for his daughter Rep. Liz Cheney, former Vice President Dick Cheney does not mince words about former President Donald Trump, calling him a “coward” and a “threat to our republic.”

“In our nation’s 246-year history, there has never been an individual who is a greater threat to our republic than Donald Trump,” Cheney, wearing a cowboy hat and looking directly into the camera, says in the ad. “He tried to steal the last election using lies and violence to keep himself in power after the voters had rejected him. He is a coward. A real man would not lie to his supporters of him.”

Polls in Wyoming show Liz Cheney trailing attorney Harriet Hageman in the GOP primary race to decide which Republican will be nominated for the general election in the deep-red state. Cheney, who is running for a fourth term in office, is the vice chairwoman for the Jan. 6 select committee investigating Trump’s role in the riot at the US Capitol stemming from the former president’s efforts to overturn his loss from him to Joe Biden in the 2020 election.

Based on testimony from several former members of the Trump administration as well as Republican election officials and lawmakers in states Trump lost in 2020, the committee has made a case that he knowingly pushed false claims that election fraud cost him victory. Dick Cheney concurred with that assessment in the ad for his daughter of him.

“He lost his election and he lost big. I know it, he knows it, and deep down I think most Republicans know it,” the former vice president says. “lynne [Liz Cheney’s mother] and I are so proud of Liz for standing up for the truth, doing what’s right, honoring her oath to the Constitution, when so many in our party are too scared to do so.”

On his daughter’s role on the select committee, Cheney said, “There is nothing more important she will ever do than lead the effort to make sure Donald Trump is never again near the Oval Office, and she will succeed.”

Liz Cheney was one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump for “incitement of insurrection” regarding his role in the riot at the US Capitol. Wyoming’s Republican Party promptly censored her for that vote, and she was then stripped of her leadership role in the party by her fellow Republicans in Congress.

As of Thursday afternoon, Trump had yet to respond to the new ad on his social media platform, Truth Social.

Categories
Business

How a war between China and Taiwan could cause product shortages

China and Taiwan are on the brink of war after a long-standing dispute over the island’s sovereignty came to a head – with potentially massive implications for consumer technology supplies.

Taiwan is home to the world’s biggest producer of computer chips, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC).

TSMC’s chips are used in a wide variety of phones, including the iPhone 13; cars including the Renault Arkana SUV; gaming consoles including the Nintendo Switch and Playstation 5; and smart home devices including the Revcook smart toaster.

Rising tensions between China and Taiwan could disrupt the production of these chips, with knock-on effects throughout the global consumer electronics industry.

TSMC’s chairman has warned that a Chinese military force or invasion would make the firm’s facilities ‘inoperable’ because it relies on ‘real-time connection’ with Europe, with Japan and the US.

Experts have told MailOnline that, if TSMC is unable to produce chips at its current rate, it could affect availability of some popular tech devices as soon as Christmas – although the biggest effects are likely to be felt next year.

TSMC ¿ the most valuable company in Asia and the 10th most valuable company in the world ¿ develops chips for a range of big companies, predominantly Apple, but also AMD, MediaTek, Qualcomm, Broadcom, Nvidia and more.  The firm makes chips that go into iPhones, iPads and Apple's Silicon Macs, as well as automobiles and gaming consoles, including Nintendo's Switch and Sony's PlayStation 5

TSMC – the most valuable company in Asia and the 10th most valuable company in the world – develops chips for a range of big companies, predominantly Apple, but also AMD, MediaTek, Qualcomm, Broadcom, Nvidia and more. The firm makes chips that go into iPhones, iPads and Apple’s Silicon Macs, as well as automobiles and gaming consoles, including Nintendo’s Switch and Sony’s PlayStation 5

WHAT IS TSMC?

Founded in 1987, TSMC – the most valuable company in Asia and the 10th most valuable company in the world – develops chips for a range of huge players.

TSMC has semiconductor fabrication plants (‘fabs’) around the island, although its main operations are located in Hsinchu in the north.

According to the company’s website, TSMC produces more than 10,000 products for almost 500 clients worldwide.

Its biggest client is Apple, but other clients include AMD, MediaTek, Qualcomm, Broadcom, Nvidia and Marvell.

The firm makes A-series chips that go into iPhones and iPads, as well as M-series chips for Apple’s Silicon Macs.

TSMC chips are also in cars and gaming consoles, including Nintendo’s Switch and Sony’s PlayStation 5.

Ben Barringer, equity research analyst at Quilter Cheviot, told MailOnline that China would likely aim to preserve TSMC and ‘the brain power behind it’ if it took control of the island, in order to gain an advantage over US and Korean based semiconductor manufacturers.

‘Given its market position, the expertise it has and the complexity of the sector, TSMC is likely to remain of strategic importance to whoever governs Taiwan both now and in the future,’ Barringer said.

However, there could be ‘non-combat interventions’ from China such as potential blockades, I have suggested.

‘While this would not prevent TSMC from operating, it would limit what it could achieve and potentially delay any technological advancements,’ he said.

‘Clearly the threat of war in Taiwan would be very troubling for those involved and we can hope any tensions can be resolved diplomatically.’

Barringer also said that delays and shortages in consumer products would most likely occur next year, and that the new iPhone 14, expected to be released next month, will likely be safe because units will have already been built.

‘The third quarter of the year is extremely important for the semiconductor industry as this is when they produce the components that go into the products that will be bought and sold at Christmas,’ he told MailOnline.

‘If China were to invade imminently then we may see some knock-on effect, but even at this point of the year any delays and shortages would most likely occur in 2023.’

Home to the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world's largest chip foundry, Taiwan produces more than half of the world's semiconductors

Home to the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world’s largest chip foundry, Taiwan produces more than half of the world’s semiconductors

Beijing's People's Liberation Army (PLA) is conducting 'important military exercises and training activities including live-fire drills in the following maritime areas and their air space bounded by lines joining,' according to the state Xinjua News Agency

Beijing’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is conducting ‘important military exercises and training activities including live-fire drills in the following maritime areas and their air space bounded by lines joining,’ according to the state Xinjua News Agency

TSMC has semiconductor fabrication plants ('fabs') around the island, although its main operations are located in Hsinchu in the north.  Pictured are components sit on circuit boards on display at the Semicon Taiwan exhibition show in 2018

TSMC has semiconductor fabrication plants (‘fabs’) around the island, although its main operations are located in Hsinchu in the north. Pictured are components sit on circuit boards on display at the Semicon Taiwan exhibition show in 2018

Simon Thomas, CEO of British electronics company Paragraf, said consumers will experience ‘longer waiting times and less choice for new products’ if geopolitical conflict were to escalate.

‘As long as supply chain uncertainly continues, the impact on different product availability will become more widespread,’ he told MailOnline.

‘We are hoping that a military invasion of Taiwan is not inevitable, with the world already going through significant turmoil this would certainly be another globally impacting crisis.’

This week, TSMC’s chairman Mark Liu warned that a war between Taiwan and China would make ‘everybody losers’.

Liu told CNN: ‘If you take a military force or invasion, you will render TSMC factory not operable. Because this is such a sophisticated manufacturing facility, it depends on real-time connection with the outside world, with Europe, with Japan, with the US, from materials to chemicals to spare parts to engineering software and diagnosis.’

Mark Liu (pictured) is chairman of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC).  This week, he warned that a war between Taiwan and China would make 'everybody losers' by making the firm's facilities 'inoperable'

Mark Liu (pictured) is chairman of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC). This week, he warned that a war between Taiwan and China would make ‘everybody losers’ by making the firm’s facilities ‘inoperable’

China’s escalating military aggression comes in the midst of a global chip shortage that goes back to 2020.

The shortage was triggered when chipmaking factories around the world were forced to shut down due to the coronavirus pandemic as part of social distancing measures, which resulted in months of no production.

It was compounded due to the rise in demand for electronics, as most people were under stay-at-home orders.

Former President Donald Trump also created more demand for TMSC chips because of his sanctions on SMIC, a chip maker based in Shanghai, as well as other Chinese firms as part of his trade war on the country.

Another issue is severe droughts in Taiwan, as TSMC needs 156,000 tons of water every day to operate their microchip manufacturing plant – enough water to fill roughly 60 Olympic-sized swimming pools.

The chip shortage is so severe that one major industrial conglomerate resorted to purchasing washing machines and tearing the semiconductors out for use in their own chip modules, Bloomberg previously reported.

Nintendo’s president Shuntaro Furukawa recently said that there’s ‘no end in sight’ to the semiconductor shortage, and so the company’s Switch console will be in short supply this year.

Images of semiconductor wafers at the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) Museum of Innovation in Hsinchu

Images of semiconductor wafers at the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) Museum of Innovation in Hsinchu

Taiwan’s dominance in semiconductors has been referred to as a ‘Silicon Shield’, in that the US and other allies would defend it from military invasion in order to prevent its high-tech industry from falling into Chinese hands.

However, new military actions have stoked fears that this shield could be broken.

On Tuesday, Chinese military began ‘live-fire’ exercises around the self-governing island in an attempt to intimidate its democratic neighbour.

China is also pressing the US into dropping its support for Taiwan, as demonstrated by the visit of US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi this week.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs called the visit a ‘serious disregard of China’s strong opposition’ before effectively blockading the island with military drills.

US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi leaves the parliament in Taipei, Taiwan on August 3, 2022

US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi leaves the parliament in Taipei, Taiwan on August 3, 2022

Why China set its sights on Taiwan

China and Taiwan have a long-standing dispute over the island’s sovereignty.

China considers Taiwan a part of its territory, more precisely a province, but many Taiwanese want the island to be independent.

From 1683 to 1895, Taiwan was ruled by China’s Qing dynasty. After Japan claimed its victory in the First Sino-Japanese War, the Qing government was forced to cede Taiwan to Japan.

The island was under the Republic of China’s ruling after World War II, with the consent of its allies, the US and UK.

The leader of the Chinese Nationalist Party, Chiang Kai-shek, fled to Taiwan in 1949 and established his government after losing the Civil War to the Communist Party and its leader Mao Zedong.

Chiang’s son continued to rule Taiwan after his father and began democratizing Taiwan.

In 1980, China put forward a policy called ‘one country, two systems,’ under which Taiwan would be given significant autonomy if it accepted Chinese reunification. Taiwan rejected the offer.

Taiwan today, with its own constitution and democratically-elected leaders, is widely accepted in the West as an independent state. But its political status remains unclear.

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Categories
Sports

Australian Diamonds v Jamaica in netball; Grace Brown wins time trial gold; Oliver Hoare, men’s 1500m final

Alex Winwood has been left dumbfounded after his boxing quarter-final was stopped early in the second round against Zambia’s Patrick Chinyemba, in what was described as an “outrage”.

Linwood dominated the first round with four of the five judges awarding it to the Aussie, landing two right hands.

At the start of the second round, the Australian was dropped by a right from his opponent, but he got up seemingly unaffected by the shot. However he was bizarrely ruled to have been knocked out with the bout waved off despite the 25-year-old appearing stable.

“I find that impossible to believe, absolutely impossible to believe. That fight should not have been stopped. That’s not a stoppage. That’s an outrage,” Jon Harker said in commentary for Channel 7.

The Aussie was emotional when he spoke after the fight, with the boxer close to tears.

“It was a pretty fast call. I won the first round, and I thought I won it pretty easily,” he said.

Australian Olympic bronze medalist Harry Garside said the fight was called off too early, but Winwood had left the decision open as he looked away after getting up off the ground.

“That’s heartbreaking for Alex. No way that’s a stoppage,” Garside said.

“He wasn’t hurt, he did turn his back which gives the referee some empathy, but you’ve got to wait for the person to get up and give them eight seconds,” he said.

“She waved it off way too soon.”

Categories
US

Dick Cheney in new ad: No individual is ‘greater threat to our republic’ than Trump

Dick Cheney calls Donald Trump a “coward” and a “threat to our republic” in a new ad for his daughter, Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who is facing a primary challenger backed by the former president.

The ad featuring the former GOP vice president offering the lacerating take on Trump was released Thursday, weeks before voters go to the polls.

“In our nation’s 246 year history, there has never been an individual who is a greater threat to our republic than Donald Trump. He tried to steal the last election using lies and violence to keep himself in power after the voters had rejected him,” Dick Cheney says in the one-minute ad, titled “He Knows It.”

“He is a coward. A real man would not lie to his supporters of him. He lost his election and he lost big. I know it, he knows it and deep down I think most Republicans know it.”

Liz Cheney voted to impeach Trump and lost her position in GOP leadership over her views. She is now the vice chair of the House panel investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

Dick Cheney said that he and his wife were “proud” of their “fearless” daughter, saying she was “honoring her oath to the Constitution.”

“There is nothing more important she will ever do than lead the effort to make sure Donald Trump is never again near the Oval Office again. And she will succeed. I am Dick Cheney. I proudly voted for my daughter. I hope you will too,” he ends the ad by saying.

Liz Cheney is fighting for her political life ahead of her primary on Aug. 16 as she faces Trump-backed challenger Harriet Hageman (R).

She drew the ire of Trump after she became one of 10 Republicans to vote to impeach him over his role in the Jan. 6 attack.

Cheney has listed the help of top Wyoming names like former Sen. Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.), who appeared in a campaign ad for her in June. Earlier this week, she touted a picture of actor Kevin Costner, who wore a shirt saying “I’m for Liz Cheney”

A poll released last month by the Casper Star-Tribune showed Cheney trailing Hageman by more than 20 points, with the women at 30 percent and 52 percent, respectively.

The Hill has reached out to a Trump spokesperson for comment.

Categories
Technology

Nothing Is Going to Stop This Mario Kart Go-Kart From Being My Next Car

your forces, Grand Touring Carsand other racing sims might be more realistic and graphically intense, but there’s only room in my heart for one racing game: Mario Kartand soon there’s only going to be room in my garage for one car: Jakks Pacific’s new electric ride-on Mario Kart go-kart.

Now, before you get your hopes up too high, this go-kart doesn’t come with all of the features and functions the karts featured in the various Mario Kart games do. Drive it into the water and it won’t transform into a submarine: it will probably just short out. Drive it off a cliff and a glider won’t deploy: you’ll just plummet to a death that friends and family will talk about for years. And no, there are no shells or oil slicks that you can use to take out other vehicles on the road, although you’re welcome to bring and toss out your own banana peels.

Image: Jakks PacificImage: Jakks Pacific

It’s first and foremost a kid’s toy designed to look like Mario’s standard kart option, with three forward-driving speeds and a top speed of around 13 km/h, although mushrooms could very well make it feel like you’re driving faster that that. The all plastic wheels won’t provide much grip for quick accelerations off the line, but they should be great for drifting around corners.

Image: Jakks PacificImage: Jakks Pacific

The Mario Kart 24V Ride-on Racer also includes a bunch of sound effects taken from the games, and while it’s officially listed for drivers “ages 3 years and up,” the seat is adjustable so that it “grows with the driver.” We’re hoping that means it can keep growing for a driver in their early ’30s who needs a reliable daily commuter but doesn’t have the budget for a full-size electric car.

Categories
US

Mistrial denied as jury weighs damages against Alex Jones in Sandy Hook defamation trial

Aug 4 (Reuters) – A Texas judge denied Alex Jones’s motion for a mistrial on Thursday as jury deliberations summarized in a defamation case over the US conspiracy theorist’s false claims about the Sandy Hook mass shooting.

The mistrial request followed the disclosure during the two-week-long trial that Jones’s lawyer accidentally sent two years of the US conspiracy theorist’s text messages to the plaintiffs.

Federico Andino Reynal, an attorney for Jones, told Judge Maya Guerra Gamble that attorneys for the plaintiffs should have immediately destroyed the records. An attorney for the parents, Mark Bankston, used the texts to undercut Jones’ testimony during cross-examination on Wednesday.

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Jones, founder of the Infowars radio show and webcast, is on trial to determine the amount of damages he owes for spreading falsehoods about the killing of 20 children and six staff at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, on Dec. 14, 2012 .

Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, the parents of slain six-year-old Jesse Lewis, are seeking as much as $150 million from Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems LLC, for what their lawyer has called a “vile campaign of defamation.”

Heslin told jurors on Tuesday that Jones’ falsehoods had made his life “hell” and led to a campaign of harassment and death threats against him by people who believed he lied about his son’s death.

Jones previously claimed that the mainstream media and gun-control activists conspired to fabricate the Sandy Hook tragedy and that the shooting was staged using crisis actors.

Jones, who later acknowledged that the shooting took place, told the Austin jury on Wednesday that it was “100% real.”

Gamble issued a rare default judgment against Jones in the case in 2021.

Free Speech Systems declared bankruptcy last week. Jones said during a Monday broadcast of Infowars that the filing will help the company stay on the air while it appeals.

Jones faces a similar defamation suit in Connecticut state court, where he has also been found liable in a default judgment.

The Sandy Hook gunman, Adam Lanza, 20, used a Remington Bushmaster rifle to carry out the massacre. It ended when Lanza killed himself with the approaching sound of police sirens.

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Reporting by Jack Queen; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Amy Stevens and Howard Goller

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Categories
Technology

2022 Ford Puma price and specs

Prices for the 2022 Drive Of The Year Light SUV winner, the compact Ford Puma, are both up and down.


  • 2022 Ford Puma pricing and specifications
  • ‘Park Pack’ option reduced from $1500 to $990
  • Contrasting black roof and opening sunroof option now exclusive to flagship ST-Line V
  • Priced from $30,340 before on-road costs

the Drive Car Of The Year Light SUV-winning 2022 Ford Puma range costs more in 2022 – depending on your configuration.

While prices are up across Ford’s whole three-variant Puma range by $350, cost-extra additions across the range have gotten cheaper.

It means the self-titled and entry-level Puma now costs $30,440 (+$350) before on-road costs.



Standard exterior features on the eponymous base model include full LED headlights, LED fog lights, 17-inch wheels with a space-saving spare wheel, a rear spoiler and matte black styling elements.

Inside, equipment remains unchanged from the car’s 2020 launch, with an 8.0-inch Sync 3 display, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, digital radio plus native satellite navigation. Standard safety features include lane departure warning, rear parking sensors and traffic sign recognition.

In terms of optional extras, the cost-extra ‘Park Pack’ has been reduced from $1500 to $990 across the whole 2022 Puma range. The package introduces front parking sensors, adaptive cruise control and active lane-keeping assist.



The two other options available on the entry-level Puma include a hands-free power tailgate coupled with keyless entry ($750), and prestige paint ($650). Two other options – prestige paint with a contrasting black roof, and an opening sunroof – discontinued on the base model for 2022.

Next up in the three-car range is the Ford Puma ST-Line. Priced from $32,390 (+$350) before on-road costs, this sports-themed model introduces an ST-Line body kit with larger rear spoiler, machined-finish 17-inch wheels, and a larger diameter exhaust.

Mechanical changes are limited to a sports suspension tune, but you also receive a 12-inch digital instrument cluster and a flat-bottomed steering wheel inside for the extra spend.



Options available on the 2022 Puma ST-Line mirror that of the entry-level Puma: the Park Pack ($990), hands-free power tailgate coupled with keyless entry ($750), and prestige paint ($650). The previously-available contrasting black roof and opening sunroof have been discontinued.

Headlining the range is the Ford Puma ST-Line V. It wears a price tag of $35,890 (+$350) before on-road costs and is the most expensive model in the range.

Equipment additions to account for the extra $3500 include a 10-speaker B&O Play audio system, privacy glass (tinted rear windows), better LED headlights, and 18-inch wheels.



Options on the 2022 Ford Puma ST-Line V include prestige paint ($650) and the Park Pack ($990), however it’s the only variant on which you’ll find prestige paint with a contrasting black roof ($1150), and an opening sunroof ($2000) as options.

All 2022 Ford Pumas are powered by the same 1.0-liter turbocharged three-cylinder petrol engine with 92kW/170Nmseven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmissions, and front-wheel drive.

the 2022 Ford Puma range was awarded the 2022 Drive Car of the Year Best Light SUV. Click here to find out more.



2022 Ford Puma Australian pricing

  • Cougar – $30,440 (up $350)
  • Puma ST-Line – $32,390 (up $350)
  • Puma ST-Line V – $35,890 (up $350)

Note: All prices exclude on-road costs.

Above: 2023 Hyundai Palisade Elite.

2022 Ford Puma standard features:

  • LED headlights, tail lights, and fog lights
  • 17-inch alloy wheels (with space-saving alloy spare)
  • Power-folding and heated exterior mirrors
  • 8.0-inch Sync 3 infotainment touchscreen
  • Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, satellite navigation and reversing camera
  • voice recognition
  • Six-speaker sound system
  • Automatic single-zone climate control
  • Auto-dimming rear-view mirror
  • push-button start
  • Cloth seats
  • Wireless smartphone charger
  • Selectable driving modes
  • Front cup holders
  • Two USB ports
  • Ambient LED interior lighting
  • Rear parking sensor
  • Six airbags
  • autonomous emergency braking
  • Lane-keep assist
  • Lane departure warning
  • Rear-view camera with 180-degree split view
  • Traffic sign recognition
  • Automatic high beam
  • Tire pressure monitoring
  • Hill hold assist

2022 Ford Puma ST-Line adds (over Puma):

  • Sports suspension
  • Larger outer rear spoiler
  • Flat-bottom steering wheel with paddle shifters
  • 17-inch black and machine-finish alloy wheels
  • 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster
  • Red interior stitching (dashboard, door trims, gear shifter, steering wheel)
  • ST-Line badging

2023 Ford Puma ST-Line V adds (over Puma ST-Line):

  • 18-inch ‘multi-spoke’ alloy wheels
  • 10-speaker B&O Play sound system
  • Upgraded ‘drum shutter’ LED headlights
  • Keyless (proximity) entry
  • Hands-free power tailgate
  • privacy glass
  • Chrome grille inserts
  • Internal scuff plates with ST-Line logo

Available exterior colors include:

  • Frozen White ($0)
  • Fantastic Red ($650)
  • Magnetic Gray ($650)
  • Gray Matter ($650)
  • Blue Blazer ($650)
  • Desert Island Blue ($650)
  • Black Agate ($650)
  • Solar Silver ($650)

After more than a decade working in the product planning and marketing departments of brands like Kia, Subaru and Peugeot, Justin Narayan returned to being a motoring writer – the very first job he held in the industry.

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Categories
US

Alex Jones’s Texts Could Be Given to Jan. 6 Panel, Lawyer Says

WASHINGTON — The lawyer for plaintiffs who are suing the conspiracy theorist Alex Jones said Thursday that he plans to turn over two years of text messages from Mr. Jones’s phone to the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

The lawyer, Mark Bankston, who represents Sandy Hook parents suing Mr. Jones in defamation lawsuits for lies he had spread about the 2012 school shooting, said in court in Austin, Texas, that he planned to turn over the texts unless a judge instructed him not to do so.

“I certainly intend to do that, unless you tell me not to,” Mr. Bankston told the judge, Maya Guerra Gamble, who appeared unsympathetic to requests from Mr. Jones’s lawyers that Mr. Bankston return the materials to them.

When lawyers raised the possibility that the texts could be subpoenaed by the committee, the judge replied, “They’re going to now. They know about them.”

A person familiar with the House committee’s work said the panel had been in touch with the plaintiffs’ lawyers about obtaining materials from Mr. Jones’s phone.

Mr. Bankston said in court that Mr. Jones’s lawyers mistakenly sent him text messages from Mr. Jones, as they attempted to defend him in court for broadcasting conspiracy theories that the Sandy Hook shooting was a hoax and that the families were actors.

Mr. Bankston said they included texts with the political operative Roger J. Stone Jr. Mr. Bankston said he had heard from “various federal agencies and law enforcement” about the material.

“Things like Mr. Jones and his intimate messages with Roger Stone are not confidential. They are not trade secrets,” Mr. Bankston said.

The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol has been pushing to obtain Mr. Jones’s texts for months, saying they could be relevant to understanding Mr. Jones’s role in helping organize the rally at the Ellipse near the White House before the riot . In November, the panel filed subpoenas to compel Mr. Jones’s testimony and communications related to Jan. 6, including his phone records of him.

The committee also issued a subpoena for the communications of Timothy D. Enlow, who was working as Mr. Jones’s bodyguard on Jan. 6.

In response, Mr. Jones and Mr. Enlow sued in an attempt to block the committee’s subpoenas. Mr. Jones eventually appeared before the panel in January and afterward said he invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination nearly 100 times.

“I just had a very intense experience being interrogated by the Jan. 6 committee lawyers,” he said at the time. “They were polite, but they were dogged.”

Even though Mr. Jones refused to share information with the committee, he said the investigators seemed to have found ways around his lack of cooperation. He said the committee had already obtained text messages from him.

“They have everything that’s already on my phones and things,” he said. “I saw my text messages” with political organizers tied to the Jan. 6 rally.

According to the Jan. 6 committee, Mr. Jones facilitated a donation from Julie Jenkins Fancelli, the heiress to the Publix Super Markets fortune, to provide what he described as “80 percent” of the funding for the Jan. 6 rally and indicated that White House officials told him that he was to lead a march to the Capitol, where Mr. Trump would speak.

Mr. Jones and Mr. Stone were among the group of Trump allies meeting in and around, or staying at, the Willard Intercontinental Hotel, which some Trump advisers treated as a war room for their efforts to get members of Congress to object to the Electoral College certification, which was taking place when the riot swamped the building.

Mr. Jones conducted an interview with Michael T. Flynn, who served briefly as national security adviser to Mr. Trump, from the Willard on Jan. 5 in which the men spread the false narrative of a stolen election.

Mr. Jones was then seen among the crowd of Mr. Trump’s supporters the next day, amplifying false claims but also at times urging the crowd to be peaceful. Among those who marched alongside him to the Capitol was Ali Alexander, a promoter of the “Stop the Steal” effort who has also been issued a subpoena.

“The White House told me three days before, ‘We’re going to have you lead the march,’” Mr. Jones said on his internet show the day after the riot. “Trump will tell people, ‘Go, and I’m going to meet you at the Capitol.’”