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Entertainment

Rev Richard Coles and Richard Dawkins dine across the divide: ‘The problem is he’s not swayed by evidence but by feeling’ | Religion


Richard C, 60, East Sussex

A portrait of Rev Richard Coles

Occupation Cleric, broadcaster, writer and Communard (retired)

voting record Always Labour. “I was a party member for a while. I rejoined to vote for Keir; I rather like Keir”

amuse bouche Richard skydives. On his first tandem freefall, jumping from a plane at 10,000ft, he asked the instructor what was the worst thing that could happen. “He said: ‘Fuck it up completely and kill us both!’”


Richard D, 81, Oxford

A portrait of Richard Dawkins

Occupation Evolutionary biologist, author, atheist

voting record Lib Dem. “To begin with it was because I liked the Oxford MP Evan Harris, one of the few scientists in parliament, and very intelligent. In recent elections I have just been passionately anti-Brexit”

amuse bouche Richard plays the EWI (pronounced ee-wee), which stands for electronic wind instrument. “It looks like a clarinet, but can sound like anything that has been programmed into it – trumpet, tuba, cello, accordion, panpipes”


For starters

CR I grew up in a world of Christian values; I was a chorister as a kid.

DR I was too.

CR I was singing the music of the Anglican choral tradition.

DR As was I.

CR But I was an atheist from the age of eight, unshakably certain that the universe was a material phenomenon.

DR That is unusual in an eight-year-old. What led you to that?

CR My grandfather’s death. I remember hearing people say well-intentioned phrases about him having gone to a better place, but I couldn’t get past the idea of ​​him decomposing in a grave – it just seemed to me that was what was going on.

DR Do you think he is in a better place now?

CR Yes, as well as decomposing. Once I got to the other side of accepting faith then all sorts of possibilities opened up. The idea that we can endure in some way after the death of our material selves – I find that captivating.

DR Captivating, but is it realistic? The brain has come into existence as a result of millions of years of evolution, presumably acquiring what we think of as consciousness. Why would you think that something that has come into being through evolution goes on when the brain decays?

Rev Richard Coles and Richard Dawkins sitting at a table at the Colony Grill in London

The big beef

CR At the end of my 20s, HIV took out about a third of my circle. I wanted to connect with that feeling from when I was a kid of being in chapel and loving the music.

DR Your conversion to Christianity came about because of HIV deaths?

CR That’s what got me through the door: the turmoil and devastation and thinking: where do I go with this?

DR You needed somewhere to go and the material world didn’t provide the consolation you needed, so you became a believer.

CR I suppose I did get consolation, but much more than that it challenged me fundamentally about the world. It was so extraordinarily rich and surprising and counterintuitive. And I started to read the Bible seriously.

DR What about miracles, water into wine, walking on water, things like that? I presume you believe in that.

CR Highly unlikely scenarios, and in my own experience I have never come across something inexplicably supernatural. But accepting the incarnation is the big one. If God does that, God could do anything; that’s the key for me.

DR I can appreciate the message in the same way I can appreciate a novel where I don’t believe in the characters but nevertheless can empathize with them and love them. I don’t understand why you take the gospels seriously because scholars don’t.

CR Plenty of scholars do. The gospels are very complicated, there are all sorts of things going on in them – some of it is eyewitness account, memory, oral tradition; some of it is theological. It’s very challenging sometimes, but it’s worth it because of the fruits, because of the wonderful stuff that continues to captivate me and motivate me.

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DR Is the wonderful stuff an aesthetic thing?

CR Some of it, but it’s more about the way it makes people feel fully alive, what it does to people and for people, and I’m sure a Muslim or a Jew or an atheist would be able to give you examples of that according to their own light.

DR I get that every day, from music, and the work that I do in science, from the beautiful world we live in. Part of that beauty is the fact that it is explicable, that what looks overwhelmingly like the artifice of a master creator you can actually explain, starting from simply beginning without the need for intervention from design.

CR We live in a world where Darwin seems to provide such a powerful and elegant and persuasive account of the origins of life. I don’t find anything in that that I would have to surrender in order to make a commitment.

DR You’re the kind of vicar who is much harder to argue with because that’s a reasonable point.

Rev Richard Coles and Richard Dawkins sitting at a table at the Colony Grill in London

sharing plate

CR I’m fascinated by Mendel, who was in both camps, I guess, in that he was a theologian and an abbot. He exercised pastoral responsibility in his community for him, but he was also an extraordinarily significant person in the development of our understanding of biology. Did you know Janáček played the organ at his funeral?

DR I did not. Have you visited his monastery?

CR I haven’t.

DR I have. The library contains his copy of On the Origin of Species with underlined passages. It’s pretty clear I read it. It also has a remarkable collection of English schoolboy fiction – Percy F Westerman and Biggles.

Rev Richard Coles and Richard Dawkins sitting at a table at the Colony Grill in London

for afters

DR When I did Desert Island Discs one of the things I chose was Mache Dich, Mein Herze from Bach’s St Matthew Passion. Sue Lawley, who was doing it at the time, couldn’t understand. It’s just sublime music.

CR I suppose I want to light on “sublime” Richard.

DR I don’t know what the dictionary definition is; you’re probably one up on me there. Bach was a genius. When there was some talk about what to send out into space as a sort of advertisement for humanity, one scientist, I forget who, suggested the complete works of Bach, but then said, “but that would be boasting”.

CR Indeed. And on every manuscript I believe Bach wrote “for the greater glory of God.”

Rev Richard Coles and Richard Dawkins sitting at a table at the Colony Grill in London

Takeaways

CR I think there is this idea in our public discourse that the force of your opinion and the force of your feeling and the passionate adherence to a belief is what validates it, and I don’t think that’s true. I’d much rather talk something through, look at inconsistencies and incongruences.

DR What is difficult to argue with Richard is he is not swayed by factual evidence; he it is feeling that matters. Feelings are important, but they don’t tell us what is true.

Rev Richard Coles and Richard Dawkins sitting at a table at the Colony Grill in London

The Rev Richard Coles’ Murder Before Evensong is published by Orionat £16.99. To support the Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply. Richard and Richard ate at the Colony Grill, London.

Want to meet someone from across the divide? Find out how to take part

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Sports

King spins out Barbados as Aussies book semi spot

Australia have secured their spot in the Commonwealth Games T20 semi-finals in emphatic fashion, thrashing Barbados by nine wickets at Edgbaston.

Alana King was denied a hat-trick and her first international five-wicket haul when skipper Meg Lanning put down a simple chance at slip, but the leg-spinner still led the way with 4-8 from her four overs as Barbados were bowled out for 64.

“That’s cricket rightno-one means to drop it or anything,” King said of the missed chance.

“It’s just the way the game goes, I’m happy that I can contribute in the way I can.”

Beth Mooney was stumped for two in the second over of the Australian chase, and Alyssa Healy was sluggish early, crawling to four from her first 14 balls faced.

But Lanning (36no off 21) was in no mood to muck around, belting four fours and two sixes, including 25 runs from Deandra Dottin’s first over.

Meg Lanning was in a hurry in her unbeaten 36 // Getty
Meg Lanning was in a hurry in her unbeaten 36 // Getty

“I was just keen to contribute really,” Lanning said.

“That over from Dottin I got a few loose balls to put away and I got a little bit of rhythm which was nice.”

Healy (23no off 24) then joined in the fun with back-to-back boundaries, as the experienced pair saw Australia home in 8.1 overs.

Sent in by Australia captain Lanning, Barbados’ hopes largely rested on the shoulders of star openers Hayley Matthews and Dottin.

Matthews (18 off 13) started brightly, smacking four boundaries off Darcie Brown, but the teenage quick had the last laugh, getting the better of the Barbados captain with a short ball that was miscued high and safely into the hands of Grace Harris.

Dottin struggled to get going, finding the boundary just once before she was trapped on the pads by King, out for a 22-ball eight.

No other Barbados batter reached double figures as Australia made regular inroads, King leading the way as she bowled Aaliyah Alleyne (8) in the 13th over, then found herself on a hat-trick in the 15th when she removed Shakera Selman (0) and Shamilia Connell (0) with consecutive deliveries.

The Australian fielders crowded around the bat and King drew a thick edge off the bat of Keila Elliott, only for Lanning to fumble what should have been a straightforward catch.

“I’ll have nightmares” Lanning said of the dropped chance, which went slightly to her right chest-high.

“I wanted to dig a hole and jump in as quickly as I could.

“I don’t know – I tried my best and I dropped it.

“I was just disappointed for Kingy. She was bowling so well and to let her down like that was not ideal.”

It mattered little to the Australian’s cause, however, as Barbados were bowled out on the final ball of the innings for 64.

Tahlia McGrath (3-13) and Ashleigh Gardner (2-6) were the other multiple wicket takers.

Australian XI: Alyssa Healy (wk), Beth Mooney, Meg Lanning (c), Tahlia McGrath, Rachael Haynes, Ashleigh Gardner, Grace Harris, Jessica Jonassen, Alana King, Megan Schutt, Darcie Brown

Barbados XI: Deandra Dottin, Hayley Matthews (c), Kycia Knight (wk), Kyshona Knight, Aaliyah Alleyne, Trishan Holder, Alisa Scantlebury, Shakera Selman, Shamilia Connell, Keila Elliott, Shanika Bruce

2022 Commonwealth Games

Australia’s squad: Meg Lanning (c), Rachael Haynes (vc), Darcie Brown, Nicola Carey, Ashleigh Gardner, Grace Harris, Alyssa Healy, Jess Jonassen, Alana King, Tahlia McGrath, Beth Mooney, Ellyse Perry, Megan Schutt, Annabel Sutherland, Amanda- Jade Wellington

See all the Commonwealth Games cricket squads here

Group A: Australia, India, Pakistan, Barbados

Group B: England, New Zealand, South Africa, Sri Lanka

July 29: Australia beat India by three wickets

July 31: Australia beat Barbados by nine wickets

August 3: Australia v Pakistan (11am local, 8pm AEST)

Semi-finals: August 6, 11am local (8pm AEST) and 6pm local (3am Aug 7 AEST)

Bronze medal match: August 7, 10am local (7pm AEST)

gold medal match: August 7, 5pm local (2am Aug 8 AEST)

All matches played at Edgbaston Stadium

Categories
US

Man killed in North Shore shooting

THE GREEN. RYAN: OVERNIGHT, PITTSBURGH POLICE SAY A MAN WAS SHOT AND KILLED ON THE NORTH SHORE. OFFICERS WERE CALLED TO THE SCENE AROUND 1:30 THIS MORNING AND FOUND A MAN SHOT TWICE NEAR THE INTERSECTION OF ANDERSON AND EAST GENERAL ROBINSON STREETS. THE VICTIM DIED AFTER PARAMEDICS TOOK HIM TO THE HOSPITAL. HIS NAM

Man killed in North Shore shooting

Pittsburgh police are investigating a deadly shooting on the city’s North Shore. Officers responded to the area near Anderson Street and E. General Robinson Street for reports of a shooting around 1:30 am Monday. There, they found a man who had been shot twice. He was taken to the hospital where he died. The man’s name has not been released. The investigation is ongoing.

Pittsburgh police are investigating a deadly shooting on the city’s North Shore.

Officers responded to the area near Anderson Street and E. General Robinson Street for reports of a shooting around 1:30 am Monday. There, they found a man who had been shot twice.

He was taken to the hospital where he died. The man’s name has not been released.

The investigation is ongoing.

Categories
Technology

Linus Torvalds uses M2 MacBook Air to release Linux 5.19


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The latest release of Linux 5.19 has more of an Apple angle than usual, with Linus Torvalds releasing it using an M2 MacBook Air running a version of Linux ported to Apple Silicon.

Linux, like other operating systems, receives updates periodically, with the open source software being no exception. Linus Torvalds, the driving force behind Linux, recently released version 5.19 of the operating system, enabling maintainers of the different Linux variants to incorporate the changes.

spotted by AsahiLinux, Torvalds has passed comment about the use of Apple products in an email to the Linux Kernel Mailing List. Posted on Sunday, Torvalds writes “the most interesting part here is that I did the release (and am writing this) on an arm64 laptop,” referring to the use of Apple Silicon.

Torvalds doesn’t specifically name the model of Mac he is using. But, Asahi Linux claims it is an M2 MacBook Air running its port.

“It’s something I’ve been waiting for for a long time [sic] time, and it’s finally reality, thanks to the Asahi team,” Torvalds continues. In July, the Asahi Linux for Mac project released an update that added Mac Studio support as well as experimental M2 support and fixing Bluetooth.

Torvalds mentions that there has been arm64 hardware running Linux for a while, but that “none of it has really been usable as a development platform until now.”

This marks the third time Torvalds has used Apple hardware for Linux development. He previously did so “for powerpc development on a ppc970 machine,” then over a decade ago with the MacBook Air as it was “the only real thin-and-lite around.”

He admits its usage has been limited, as it hasn’t been used “for any real work” so far. It has been used for “doing test builds and boots and now the actual release tagging.”

Torvalds anticipates using it while traveling “and finally dog-fooding the arm64 side too.”

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Categories
Entertainment

Hunted Australia viewers are left furious over a ‘wildly unfair’ twist

Viewers of Hunted Australia have been left furious over an ‘unfair’ twist that saw one half of a team get caught on Sunday’s episode.

Bondi couple Lavinia and Nick spent two weeks completely off the grid by avoiding friends and family, and not using the bank cards given to them at the start of the competition.

But eventually the pair found themselves in need of money because they were getting ‘cold, tired and hungry’.

Viewers of Hunted Australia have been left furious over an 'unfair' twist that saw one half of a team get caught on Sunday's episode

Viewers of Hunted Australia have been left furious over an ‘unfair’ twist that saw one half of a team get caught on Sunday’s episode

However, just as they went to withdraw the cash they were entitled to spend, as per the rules of the game, the Hunters decided to throw a spanner in the works.

They froze the pair’s ATM card in a bid to catch them, even though all the other teams had taken advantage of this emergency cash resource.

In CCTV footage, Lavinia made several attempts to withdraw cash without luck.

The Hunters cheered back at HQ as she struggled to work out why one of their few lifelines had been taken away before they could even use it.

Viewers flocked to Twitter to express their anger and frustration, labeling the Hunters’ decision ‘unfair’.

Bondi couple Lavinia and Nick spent two weeks completely off the grid by avoiding friends and family, and not using the bank cards given to them at the start of the competition

Bondi couple Lavinia and Nick spent two weeks completely off the grid by avoiding friends and family, and not using the bank cards given to them at the start of the competition

Soon the pair found themselves in need of money because they were getting 'cold and hungry' - but when Lavinia tried to use an ATM, she discovered the Hunters had frozen her account

Eventually they found themselves in need of money because they were getting ‘cold and hungry’ – but when Lavinia tried using an ATM, she realized the Hunters had frozen her account

‘I gotta say that freezing the bank account is wildly unfair,’ one viewer tweeted.

‘Hey freezing their bank accounts… is that fair?’ another added.

Meanwhile, several viewers accused the Hunters of ‘cheating’.

Viewers flocked to Twitter to express their anger and frustration, labeling the Hunters' decision 'unfair'

Viewers flocked to Twitter to express their anger and frustration, labeling the Hunters’ decision ‘unfair’

'Hey freezing their bank accounts.. is that fair?'  one viewer tweeted

‘Hey freezing their bank accounts.. is that fair?’ one viewer tweeted

‘The Hunters canceling the bank cards is cheating… everyone else on the run can use theirs still,’ one wrote.

‘Here’s a card with $500, but you can’t withdraw it all at once, and we’ll cancel it at any time we choose to. This show is addictive but utter bulls**t.’

‘Don’t think it’s fair that the hunters cancel or freeze bank cards. It’s a game and that feels like cheating… too much power and now manipulation!’ another fan tweeted.

Several viewers accused the Hunters of 'cheating'

Several viewers accused the Hunters of ‘cheating’

'Here's a card with $500, but you can't withdraw it all at once, and we'll cancel it at any time we choose to.  This show is addictive but utter bulls**t,' one fan tweeted

‘Here’s a card with $500, but you can’t withdraw it all at once, and we’ll cancel it at any time we choose to. This show is addictive but utter bulls**t,’ one fan tweeted

Another viewer wrote, 'Don't think it's fair that the hunters cancel or freeze bank cards.  It's a game and that feels like cheating... too much power and now manipulation!'

Another viewer wrote, ‘Don’t think it’s fair that the hunters cancel or freeze bank cards. It’s a game and that feels like cheating… too much power and now manipulation!’

The shock twist comes after last week’s ‘unAustralian’ betrayal which saw aunt-and-niece duo Karen and Brittany get caught after being tipped off by their bus driver.

Also on Sunday’s episode, friends Puneet and Kris dropped by the remote country property of one of their contacts, but fled after becoming suspicious the Hunters where on their tail.

The Hunters managed to capture the pair, as well as Nick, leaving his partner Lavinia on her own with no money.

The Hunted team is still tracking down five contestants – Stathi and Matt, Jake and Rob, and Lavinia – who are on the run with just a few days left.

The Hunters managed to capture friends Puneet and Kris, as well as Nick, leaving his partner Lavinia (pictured) on her own with no money

The Hunters managed to capture friends Puneet and Kris, as well as Nick, leaving his partner Lavinia (pictured) on her own with no money

The Hunted team is still tracking down five contestants who are on the run with a few days left

The Hunted team is still tracking down five contestants who are on the run with a few days left

A prize of $100,000 awaits the winners, but they must first evade an elite team of 'hunters' comprising former intelligence agents and police officers

A prize of $100,000 awaits the winners, but they must first evade an elite team of ‘hunters’ comprising former intelligence agents and police officers

Hunted is a thrilling series which began following 18 contestants who must go on the run and avoid being captured for 21 days.

A prize of $100,000 awaits the winners, but they must first evade an elite team of ‘hunters’ comprising former intelligence agents and police officers.

Hunted Australia continues Monday at 7.30pm on Channel 10

Hunted Australia continues Monday at 7.30pm on Channel 10

Hunted Australia continues Monday at 7.30pm on Channel 10

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Categories
Sports

David Fifita blunder hurting Titans

I can’t help but think that the Titans are using enigmatic forward David Fifita in the wrong manner.

On his day, Fifita is one of the NRL’s most damaging ball runners – thus his million dollar price tag.

But Fifita seemed to put all his effort into defense in the 36-24 loss to the Raiders.

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He topped the tackle count for both sides with 35 – a positive considering the heavy criticism of his play as being lazy.

But in attack, Fifita made just 10 runs for 73 meters, one of the poorest hauls for either forward pack.

If I was Titans coach Justin Holbrook – fighting to save his career – I’d tell Fifita to let other blokes do the defense and concentrate on his attacking game.

Axed Newcastle flyer gets last laugh

Knights fans keep copping more and more heartache in 2022 – and yesterday’s loss to the Bulldogs was particularly painful.

Star for the Bulldogs – who scored a convincing 24-10 win at Newcastle – was a player dumped by the Knights this season.

In-form winger Jacob Kiraz, who scored a hat trick and ran a game-high 259 meters, was in the Knights system last season before being shown the door.

The powerful flanker punished the Knights for their decision in classic style, scoring twice in the opening 10 minutes to put the Bulldogs on the way to their well-deserved win.

An unknown at the start of the year, 20-year-old Kiraz is having a fine season and must be in the running for the rookie of the year award.

Kiraz gets a double

Sheens’ big call

The wily old fox Tim Sheens has pretty much left Brett Kimmorley to his own devices since he took over the reins at the Tigers.

But one move Sheens did suggest was shifting halfback Jackson Hastings to lock – and what a success it has been.

The Tigers have averaged 24 points per game since Hastings became a middle forward and the versatile former Rooster and Sea Eagle was superb in the upset win over Brisbane.

Sadly, nothing is easy when you’re a Tigers fan – and Hastings was the victim of a shocking tackle that resulted in a broken leg late in the win and he is out for the rest of the year.

The big positive for the Tigers was the form of halfback Jock Madden, a late replacement for the enigmatic Luke Brooks.

Don’t be surprised if Brooks is granted a release over the summer and Madden is given his chance on a permanent basis in 2023.

Broncos star in strife for ugly tackle

Talakai re-captures career-defining form

Siosifa Talakai’s performance against Manly in round seven remains one of the talking points of season 2022.

Rampaging Shark Talakai destroyed the Sea Eagles, running for 262 meters and scoring and setting up tries like they were going out of style.

A back-rower moved to the centers, Talakai has had his ups and downs since then, reflecting how hard a positional change can be.

But against the Rabbitohs in Saturday night’s golden point thriller, Talakai was back to his devastating best.

He made 225 meters – his most since that career-defining game against Manly, and was the difference between two very closely matched teams.

His ground gaining was nearly 50 meters higher than any other player on the park – and those precious meters made it possible for Nicho Hynes to boot the deciding field goal.

Hynes wins it for Cronulla in Golden Point

Questions remain over Eels despite win

Who would have thought that Parramatta would thump Penrith 34-10 – but then cop criticism after the game?

But that was the case in the local western derby at CommBank Stadium on Friday night after a somewhat bizarre game.

The Eels were dynamic in the first half, charging to a 30-4 lead with some scintillating football.

Even before Nathan Cleary was sent off in the 18th minute, the Eels were well on top at 12-4.

But the second half was a real downer for Eels fans – their team didn’t go on with the job and remarkably, the 12 man Panthers side actually won the half.

The Eels scored just one try in the entire half – in the dying moments – whereas Penrith scored one and had two disallowed.

When Parra are on song, they are very good – but need to go for 80 minutes, especially against a team down and out as the Panthers were.

Slater says Cleary doesn’t deserve big ban

Manly to pay price for week of turmoil

Rarely does a team make 18 errors and still win the football match.

But as we all know, Thursday night’s Manly v Roosters clash was no ordinary game.

Missing seven key players who took exception to Manly wearing the rainbow jersey, the Sea Eagles were realistically never going to win.

But they gave it a red hot go, holding a strong Roosters side to 20-10.

You could almost guarantee that had the seven played, Manly would have beaten the Roosters, who were off their game for much of the night.

Sadly for Manly, I can’t help but think that those two points will come back to haunt them in the battle for finals spots.

Manly rainbow meeting held amid fears of ‘rift’

Melbourne’s troubles not over

The Storm’s four-match losing streak is finally done with – but the headaches for Craig Bellamy aren’t over yet.

The Storm downed the Warriors 24-12 – but the win wasn’t as comfortable as the scoreline suggests.

Melbourne only scored four tries to the Warriors’ three, with the Kiwi team unable to kick a goal all night.

And the three Warriors tries – all to winger Edward Kosi – exposed real problems on the Storm’s right side defense that are certain to be tested by rival coaches in coming weeks.

Throw in a couple of blokes on report, a couple more injured and it was far from the usual clinical Melbourne win we have been so accustomed to watching in recent years.

Joey says Storm prop should have been sent off

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Categories
US

What to watch in primaries in Arizona, Michigan, elsewhere

In Missouri, scandal-ridden former Gov. Eric Greitens is attempting a political comeback. In Michigan, a crowded field of Republican gubernatorial candidates includes a man charged in the Jan. 6 US Capitol attack. In Arizona, a prominent figure in the QAnon conspiracy movement is running for the US House.

Those are among some of the most notable contests in Tuesday’s primary elections being held in six states.

Arizona, which Democrat Joe Biden narrowly won in 2020, is a top target for former President Donald Trump, who tried in vain to get his defeat overturned. He has endorsed a slate of candidates up and down the ballot who have promoted his false claims of a stolen election.

Trump has also been zeroed in on the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach him over the Jan. 6 insurrection. Three of them are on the ballot Tuesday in Washington state and Michigan, as are two members of “the Squad,” Democratic Reps. Cori Bush of Missouri and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan.

Meanwhile, Kansas voters could clear the way for the Republican-controlled Legislature to further restrict or ban abortion if they approve a proposed state constitutional change. It’s the first referendum vote on abortion policy by a state since the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June.

Ohio is also holding a primary for state legislative races on Tuesday, three months after its statewide and congressional contests — a split system that resulted from legal wrangling over redistricting.

What to watch:

ARIZONA

Trump’s endorsed in Arizona all have one thing in common: They have loudly candidates disseminated misinformation about the legitimacy of the 2020 election, despite election officials and Trump’s own attorney general saying there is no credible evidence the race was tainted.

In the governor’s race, Trump has backed former television news anchor Kari Lakewho has said that she would not have certified Arizona’s election results in 2020. Lake faces businesswoman Karrin Taylor Robson, who is endorsed by former Vice President Mike Pence and outgoing Gov. Doug Duey.

Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, a staunch defender of the 2020 election, is strongly favored to win the Democratic nomination for governor.

In the Republican primary for US Senate, Trump has backed tech investor Blake Masters as the candidate to go up against Democratic incumbent Mark Kelly in the fall. Masters, whose campaign has been bankrolled by billionaire Peter Thiel, has called for reducing legal immigration and espoused the baseless “great replacement” conspiracy theory, claiming Democrats are trying to “replace Americans who were born here.”

Attorney General Mark Brnovich, another Senate candidate, has been weighed down by lackluster fundraising and fierce criticism from Trump, who says Brnovich did little to advance his election fraud claims. Another top candidate, Jim Lamonthe founder of a solar energy firm, has touted his experience as a military veteran and entrepreneur.

The Republican primary for secretary of state includes Trump-backed legislator Mark Finchem, a state representative who worked to overturn Trump’s 2020 loss; state Rep. Shawnna Bolick, who introduced a bill to let legislators ignore election results and choose their own presidential electors; and state Sen. Michelle Ugenti-Rita, who has long pushed to overhaul election laws. The GOP establishment has rallied around advertising executive Beau Lane in the race.

Ron Watkins, who has ties to the QAnon conspiracy theory, is considered a long shot in his House run. Watkins, a Republican, served as the longtime administrator of the online message boards that became the home of the anonymous “Q.” The conspiracy theory is centered around the baseless belief that Trump waged a secret campaign against enemies in the “deep state” and that a group of satanic, cannibalistic child molesters secretly runs the globe.

In the state Legislature, Arizona House Speaker Rusty Bowerswho testified at a Jan. 6 hearing about Trump’s pressure to overturn the 2020 election, faces a Trump-backed candidate in his bid to run for the state Senate.

MICHIGAN

The Republican primary for governor was wild from the start, with five candidates getting kicked off the ballot for failing to file enough valid nominating signatures.

Several of the remaining candidates have baggage that could hurt in a general election against Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

Real estate broker Ryan Kelley has pleaded not guilty to misdemeanor charges after authorities said he rallied Trump’s supporters to storm the US Capitol. Businessman Kevin Rinke was sued in the 1990s for sex harassment and racial discrimination — allegations he says were lies. Chiropractor Garrett Soldano hawked supplements he falsely claimed treated COVID-19. Businesswoman Tudor Dixonwho has been endorsed by Trump, has previously acted in low-budget horror pictures, one of which included a zombie biting off a man’s genitals.

All of the candidates falsely say there was fraud in the 2020 election, with Dixon, Kelley and Soldano saying the election was stolen from Trump.

Republican Rep. Peter Meijer is hoping to hold on to his seat after voting to impeach Trump. The former president has endorsed businessman and missionary John Gibbswho worked in the Trump administration under Housing Secretary Ben Carson.

MISSOURI

Greitens’ political career appeared over when he resigned as governor in 2018, following his admission to an extramarital affair and accusations of blackmail and campaign finance violations. On Tuesday, the former Navy SEAL officer has a chance at redemption in his Republican primary for the seat held by retiring GOP US Sen. Roy Blunt.

Greitens, Attorney General Eric Schmitt and US Rep. Vicky Hartzler are the front-runners in a crowded 21-person GOP field that includes US Rep. Billy Long and Mark McCloskey, the St. Louis lawyer who along with his wife pointed guns at racial injustice protesters who ventured onto their private street.

Trump has not made an endorsement in the race, though he’s ruled out Hartzler.

The GOP winner in Missouri, a solidly Republican state, will be favored in November. But Republican leaders have long worried that Greitens — his ex-wife has also accused him of abuseallegations Greitens has called “baseless” — could win the primary but lose the general election.

On the Democratic side, the nomination appears to be up for grabs between Lucas Kuncea Marine veteran and self-proclaimed populist, and Trudy Busch Valentinean heiress of the Busch beer fortune who has largely self-funded her campaign.

WASHINGTON

Two Republican House members from Washington state who voted to impeach Trump face primary challengers endorsed by him.

Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, who has been in Congress since 2011, has said she voted for impeachment because she had “an obligation to the Constitution.” Trump has endorsed Joe Kenta former Green Beret and a conservative cable show regular who echoes the former president’s grievances about the 2020 election outcome.

Rep. Dan Newhouse, a congressman since 2015, said he cast the vote to impeach Trump for inciting and refusing to immediately stop the Jan. 6 insurrection. Among his challengers he is Loren Culpa Trump-backed former small-town police chief who refused to concede the 2020 governor’s race to Democrat Jay Inslee.

In Washington, the top two vote-getters in each race, regardless of party, move forward to November.

KANSAS

Voters will decide whether to approve a change to the state constitution that could allow the Legislature to restrict or ban abortion despite a 2019 state Supreme Court ruling that abortion access is a fundamental right. It’s the first referendum on abortion by a state since Roe v. Wade’s reverse.

In statewide races, Republican Kris Kobach is running for attorney general as he attempts a political comeback following losses in races for governor and US Senate in previous years. Kobach, the state’s former secretary of state, served as vice chair of a short-lived Trump commission on election fraud after the 2016 election.

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Associated Press writers Jonathan J. Cooper in Phoenix; Sara Burnett in Chicago; Jim Salter in O’Fallon, Missouri; Chris Grygiel in Seattle; and John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas; contributed to this report.

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Meg Kinnard can be reached at http://twitter.com/MegKinnardAP.

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Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections and on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ap_politics.

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Categories
Technology

Ranking Every Newly Announced Track

Pushing five years now since its release on Nintendo Switch, mario kart 8 is still going strong. Nintendo has just announced the second wave of their DLC tracks, with 8 new courses coming returning to the series from previous games.

Now, it would be difficult to call any track from mario kart 8 “bad”, as they are all pretty fun, but some definitely have risen above the rest of the pack in popularity. These are all of the new tracks, ranked by which are the best of the lot.

SNES Mario Circuit 3


Super Mario Kart Circuit Race

original Mario Kart for the SNES is the one that started it all, and the Mario Circuit 3 was a variation on the basic, classic racetrack. This is great for nostalgia, and mario kart 8 looks to be doing a great job of updating the track for modern play while keeping the aesthetic.

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Unfortunately, it also means that, like other updates of SNES tracks, Mario Circuit 3 is somewhat bland. It still looks great, but there is little in the way of jumps, obstacles, or variation. It is simply a series of turns and item boxes. Mario Circuit 3 is a great nostalgia trip, but is outshined by more exciting courses.

GBA Snowland


Mario prepares a mushroom while racing through Snow Land in Mario Kart 8

Like Mario Circuit 3, Snow Land for the Game Boy Advance release Mario Kart: Super Circuit is held back slightly by the of its original console. The course is still a lot of fun, but is still somewhat basic compared to many of the other tracks in wave 2.


That said, Snow Land has definitely been overhauled since its Game Boy Advance days. More than just being given a fresh coat of paint, the track features several jumps, watery hazards, and penguins. Plus, the snow and ice may make for some varied surfaces for players to race on. With these upgrades, Snow Land could stand up with Mario Kart 8’s best retro courses.

N64 Kalimari Desert


Mario Kart Kalimari Desert

The Kalimari Desert has seen several appearances in the Mario Kart series, but the N64 version remains the original and definitive. The updated version of the track looks to be a faithful and exciting new addition to the mario kart 8 roster.


Featuring a fun old-west style score and some gorgeous desert backgrounds reminiscent of the American Southwest, Kalimari Desert is also a fun and varied track, with plenty of jumps, shortcuts, and even a train to dodge. Kalimari Desert is a blast to race through as all of Mario Kart 8’s best characters.

Sydney Sprint Tour


the Sydney Opera House in Sydney sprint from Mario Kart Tour

Sydney Sprint first appeared in the mobile mario kart tour, and is an impressive and fun recreation of a real city. The course has multiple levels in some areas, giving players the choice of the high or low road, and has some quick turns that players can use for a long drift.

The tour through the famous Australian city takes players through iconic landmarks such as the Sydney Opera House and the Harbor Bridge, and a lovely glide over the harbor itself. The track itself is not quite as eccentric as some others, but its recreation of the city is a sight to behold.

New York Minute Tour


starting line new york minute in Mario Kart 8

New York Minute made its Mario Kart debut in mario kart tour alongside Sydney Sprint, and is another recreation of an even more famous city. The track takes players through Central Park and past various iconic landmarks, such as the Empire State Building and Madison Square Garden.

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Not only will those familiar with the city notice plenty of familiar spots, New York Minute is also full of opportunities for jumps and quick boosts to stay ahead of the competition. Sydney Sprint may also be pretty great, but New York Minute just barely has it beat.

Sky High Sundae


Mario Kart 8 Deluxe Booster Pass Wave 2 Sky-High Sundae

The only new track in the Wave 2 DLC pack, Sky-High Sundae looks to be a thrilling and dangerous course. Set in a floating city made of ice cream and other sweets, Sky-High Sundae is a high-risk, challenging course sure to excite long-time fans.

RELATED: The Best New Tracks In Mario Kart 8 Deluxe

The course features sections with multiple pathways, narrow tracks, tight turns, and high-flying gliding sections. Racers will definitely need to be careful not to fall off the precarious confectionaries and can try to outwit their opponents with alternate paths. Sky-High Sundae could be a high-skill course with the potential to be one of the hardest tracks in mario kart 8.


Wii Mushroom Gorge


overview of mushroom gorge in Mario Kart Wii

Mushroom Gorge was one of the best tracks for Mario Kart’s Wii release, so fans should be thrilled that it is returning to the series for mario kart 8‘s second wave. The track was visually stunning, allowed for some clever strategy, and was just a blast to play.

Mushroom Gorge featured a few sections with multiple paths, allowing players to choose their best route, and the titular mushrooms could give players a quick bounce over gaps or other players. Throw in a few obstacles at the end and some breakneck turns, and Mushroom Gorge has the potential to be one the best DLC tracks in mario kart 8.

DS Waluigi Pinball


Waluigi Pinball Mario Kart

As great as all of the other tracks are bound to be, the best of them all has to be the DS’s Waluigi Pinball course. Waluigi Pinball racers have to bolt through a literal pinball machine, dodging flappers and bouncers, launching over gaps, and battling the course just as much as the other racers.

Waluigi Pinball combines all the fun of Pinball with the fun of Mario Kart, and it is definitely a winning combination. Since Waluigi has become such a fan favorite character, traversing such a delightful, wacky course emblazoned with his face he will be a blast. Waluigi Pinball may be one of the series’ most eccentric tracks, and it is all the better for it.


NEXT: 10 Mario Kart Tracks That Don’t Need To Return in Deluxe

Street Fighter 2 Almost Ruined The Video Game Industry

Street Fighter 2 Almost Ruined The Video Game Industry


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Categories
Entertainment

Man who made lockdown videos of his ‘Oma’ releases film

A man who accidentally made his mother an online star through home videos has released a film in her honor.

Affectionately known as Oma, Hendrika Van Genderen shot to fame after her son Jason created a makeshift supermarket in their lounge room during a COVID-19 lockdown.

Jason said more than 100 million people followed Oma’s journey with dementia before she died in February.

A man who accidentally made his mother an online star through home videos has released a film in her honour. Affectionately known as Oma, Hendrika Van Genderen shot to fame after her son Jason created a makeshift supermarket in their lounge room during a COVID-19 lockdown .
A man who accidentally made his mother an online star through home videos has released a film in her honour. Affectionately known as Oma, Hendrika Van Genderen shot to fame after her son Jason created a makeshift supermarket in their lounge room during a COVID-19 lockdown . (Nine)

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“She would totally be looking at this and having a laugh saying, ‘I can’t believe that’s me’, that’s exactly what she’d be saying,” Jason told A Current Affairr.

Jason and his wife Megan filmed most of the documentary on their mobile phones, capturing the good times and the bad.

“Part of exposing our family to the world is saying, ‘Well, we’re happy to share our story and there’s a lot in our story that we know millions of people around the world are living,'” Jason said.

While it was Oma’s smile and adorable personality that captured hearts across the globe, Megan says the film also dives into the darker times when caring for someone with dementia.

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“There is no rulebook, there is no roadmap. It was always about having sort of boundaries, is this safe, is this sustainable, is the rest of the family okay?” Megan said.

Many audience members at a Sydney screening had their own stories to tell, many relating to the dementia journey.

Retired nurse Lyn Edwards said even those working on the frontline in the fight against dementia can learn from the film.

“It’s time to open the doors wider and accept information, not just from the professionals but from the people who have learned experience,” Lyn said.

A man who accidentally made his mother an online star through home videos has released a film in her honour. Affectionately known as Oma, Hendrika Van Genderen shot to fame after her son Jason created a makeshift supermarket in their lounge room during a COVID-19 lockdown .
A man who accidentally made his mother an online star through home videos has released a film in her honour. Affectionately known as Oma, Hendrika Van Genderen shot to fame after her son Jason created a makeshift supermarket in their lounge room during a COVID-19 lockdown . (Nine)

Clair Gardiner brought her 76-year-old mother Barbara to see Everybody’s Oma after stopping work three years ago to become her full-time carer.

“It’s pretty tough at the moment with COVID, because there are just no carers out there, so that’s pretty tough caring at home on my own,” Clair said.

Jason says Everybody’s Oma was an idea thought up over dinner with friends.

“If someone says, ‘Hey, let’s make a film about your family’, you’re probably not going to think about having 80 per cent of the shots of you walking around the house in your pajamas with your hair sticking up all over the place,” Jason said.

“It was important to show the raw honesty of life because that’s what’s reflected in households all around the country.”

READMORE: Good Samaritan fears he is facing hefty ends after complaints

About 1.6 million Australians care for someone with dementia.

HammondCare’s Marie Alford says it’s predicted that 450,000 people will live with the disease by 2030.

“You’d be really hard pressed to find a family that hasn’t been impacted by dementia and by talking about it, we actually connect people to services earlier and that’s got to be a great thing,” Marie said.

Everybody’s Oma opens in cinemas on August 11.

HERE
(Nine)
Categories
Sports

Pickett, Cotchin charged by MRO

The Match Review Officer has completed their review of Sunday’s game against Brisbane, with Marlion Pickett and Trent Cotchin offered financial sanctions.

Charges laid:

Marlion PickettRichmond, has been charged with Engaging in Rough Conduct against Rhys Mathieson, Brisbane Lions, during the third quarter of the Round 20 match between Richmond and the Brisbane Lions played at the MCG on Sunday 31 July, 2022.

In summary, the player can accept a $3000 sanction with an early plea.

Based on the available evidence, the incident was assessed as Careless Conduct, Low Impact, High Contact. The incident was classified as a $5000 sanction as a second offense. The player can accept a $3000 sanction with an early plea.

Trent CotchinRichmond, has been charged with Misconduct against Dayne Zorko, Brisbane Lions, during the first quarter of the Round 20 match between Richmond and the Brisbane Lions played at the MCG on Sunday 31 July, 2022.

In summary, the player can accept a $1000 sanction with an early plea.

Based on the available evidence, the incident was assessed as Misconduct. The incident was classified as a $1500 sanction as a first offense. The player can accept a $1000 sanction with an early plea.

Incident explained:

The Match Review Officer has reviewed the events leading up to Zac Bailey’s injury. The Vision from match was inconclusive. The AFL has interviewed Bailey and found that Bailey was unsure if injury was sustained in bump or subsequent contact from Marlion Pickett. No sanction applied.