Tag Archives: Dismissing

‘Bachelorette’ Star Charity Lawson on Feeling “Blindsided” During Fantasy Suites Before Dismissing “Selfish” Suitor – Hollywood Reporter

  1. ‘Bachelorette’ Star Charity Lawson on Feeling “Blindsided” During Fantasy Suites Before Dismissing “Selfish” Suitor Hollywood Reporter
  2. Who Wins ‘The Bachelorette’ 2023? Reality Steve Reveals Spoilers for Charity’s Winner Just Jared
  3. ‘The Bachelorette’: Charity Reacts to Aaron’s Return, Teases ‘Emotional Rollercoaster’ Finale (Exclusive) Entertainment Tonight
  4. The Bachelorette: Charity Lawson Just Delivered The Best Breakup Line During Fantasy Suites, And The Fan Reactions Are Hilarious CinemaBlend
  5. The Bachelorette Season 20: Where does Uncle Joe rank amongst hometown family members? Accept this Rose
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

US Judge Approves $1,300,000,000 Binance.US Deal With Voyager After Dismissing SEC Objections – The Daily Hodl

  1. US Judge Approves $1,300,000,000 Binance.US Deal With Voyager After Dismissing SEC Objections The Daily Hodl
  2. US Court Approves Binance.US’s $1.3B Bid For Voyager Client Assets The Defiant – DeFi News
  3. Binance.US Takes Over Voyager’s Assets With Judge’s Approval TheStreet
  4. SEC dealt blow as Judge clears Binance.US to buy Bankrupt Voyager Digital Assets – Will this affect Ripple and Binance securities case? Crypto News Flash
  5. US Bankruptcy Judge Approves Binance.US $1.3B Deal for Voyager Digital, but Hurdles Remain – Here’s the Latest Cryptonews
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

UFC champ Francis Ngannou warns against dismissing Jake Paul: ‘You better take him seriously’

Francis Ngannou is the reigning UFC heavyweight champion and is one of the many who have watched Jake Paul take down former stars in the company in the boxing ring.

But while others have dismissed the YouTube star-turned-pro boxer, Ngannou warned those dismissing him that they better start paying close attention to what he’s doing.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Francis Ngannou of Cameroon interacts with media after his victory over Stipe Miocic during the UFC 260 event at UFC APEX on March 27, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
(Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

“Honestly, I was impressed by Jake Paul,” Ngannou told TMZ Sports. “I didn’t see that coming. I was sure that Tyron Woodley was going to win this fight, you know?”

Paul defeated former UFC champion Tyron Woodley twice – once via split decision and the other via knockout after Woodley was a last-minute replacement for Tommy Fury. Paul has not lost since stepping into the ring.

JAKE PAUL CALLS OUT UFC STARS AFTER TYRON WOODLEY KO: ‘I’M GOING TO EMBARRASS THEM TOO’

Jake Paul, left, punches Tyron Woodley during the third round of a Cruiserweight fight Sunday, Dec. 19, 2021, in Tampa, Fla.
(AP Photo/Chris O’Meara)

“But you’ve got to give it to Jake Paul. He made a statement, a huge statement and he proved his money is where his mouth is,” Ngannou added. “He’s taking himself very seriously. … You better take him seriously because he proved it.”

Paul sent a message to UFC president Dana White and called out other stars to get into the ring with him.

Jake Paul, left, looks back after knocking out Tyron Woodley during the sixth round of a Cruiserweight fight Sunday, Dec. 19, 2021, in Tampa, Fla.
(AP Photo/Chris O’Meara)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“I just knocked out a five-time UFC champion and embarrassed your whole company. Please let me get Kamaru Usman. Please let me get [Nate] Diaz. Please let me get [Jorge] Masvidal. Please let me get [Conor] McGregor. Because I’m going to embarrass them too. I promise you that, Dana. I promise you that,” he said.

Read original article here

Hannity rips ‘Shadow President’ Klain for dismissing inflation concerns

In his Opening Monologue on Thursday, Sean Hannity identified White House Chief of Staff Ronald Klain as the “puppeteer” behind the actions of the “cognitively impaired” 78-year-old President Joe Biden, calling out the Delaware Democrat’s longtime confidant for dismissing the American people’s concerns about rising inflation.

Klain, who served as Biden’s vice presidential chief of staff as well as President Obama’s Ebola czar, retweeted a Harvard professor who diagnosed the current inflation spike as a “high-class problem”.

On “Hannity,” the host said Klain’s intentional ignorance to the economic plight of working class Americans under Biden is not becoming of a leader:

“If you are middle-class or low income in America, you are in trouble, thanks to Joe Biden – He’s the one that gave up the energy independence he inherited,” Hannity said. 

“Shadow President and master puppeteer – so kind, so thoughtful and loving – Ron Klain … believes we smelly Walmart shoppers of America, that cling to God, guns, Bibles, and religion don’t need to worry about inflation,” he said.

Biden’s former boss, President Obama, famously claimed during a 2008 fundraiser that economically depressed Pennsylvanians “cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them — or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment, as a way to explain their frustrations.”

Hannity said the future only looks bleaker for Americans:

“Look at your gas tank, how much does it cost you to fill your tank? Your heating bills were about to jump 54% as “The Wall Street Journal” put it, a ‘winter of giant gas bills is coming’.”

CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

He noted that former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, a liberal appointed by Obama, has even sounded the alarm about Biden’s inflationary policies.

The host echoed a sentiment from CNBC anchor Joe Kernen, about a Democratic president “losing” Summers:

“It’s really bad and it gets worse,” Hannity said, finishing Kernen’s thought in his own regard.

Read original article here

Dismissing Catholic abuse victims’ lawsuit, European Court of Human Rights rules Vatican cannot be sued in European courts

It was the ECHR’s first case to deal with the immunity of the Holy See, the court said.

A group of 24 Belgian, French and Dutch abuse survivors attempted to sue the Holy See and Catholic Church leaders in Belgian courts beginning in 2011, but courts in that country ruled they did not have jurisdiction over the Vatican, the European Court of Human Rights said Tuesday in explaining its ruling.

The abuse survivors — who said they were abused by priests when they were children — fought their way up through the Belgian court system before bringing their suit to the European court in 2017, the ECHR said.

The survivors argued that they had been denied right of access to a court, under article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which states that everyone is entitled to a fair trial.

The applicants first filed a class action in the Ghent Court of First Instance in July 2011. They claimed that the defendants should be liable to pay 10,000 euros (approximately $11,600) in compensation to each survivor in compensation “because of the Catholic Church’s policy of silence on the issue of sexual abuse.” In October 2013, the Ghent Court declined jurisdiction in respect of the Holy See, the ruling said.

On Tuesday, the ECHR ruled 6-1 in the case of J.C. and Others v. Belgium, saying that the Vatican is a sovereign state that can not be sued, and that there had been nothing “unreasonable or arbitrary” in the Belgian courts’ adopting that position.

The court’s decision, however, is not final and any party can request an appeal, known as a “Grand Chamber review,” within three months of the ruling.

Tuesday’s ruling comes as the Catholic Church is facing a reckoning on sexual abuse, with a growing number of survivors fighting for justice.

Last week a landmark report found that France’s Catholic clergy sexually abused an estimated 216,000 minors over the past seven decades, and that the Church had prioritized the protection of the institution over victims who were urged to stay silent.

The number of abused minors rises to an estimated 330,000 when including victims of people who were not clergy but had other links to the Church, such as Catholic schools and youth programs, according to the report. Between 2,900 and 3,200 abusers were estimated to have worked in the French Catholic Church between 1950 and 2020, out of a total of 115,000 priests and other clerics, the report found.

The day after its release, Pope Francis called the report “a moment of shame,” and called upon leaders of the Church to ensure “similar tragedies” never happen again.

Francis also assured sexual abuse survivors of his prayers and said: “I wish to express my sorrow and my pain to the victims for the trauma that they have suffered and also my shame, our shame, my shame for the too long incapacity of the church to put them at the center of its attention.”

Ongoing allegations of abuse

While the Church has taken “important steps” to prevent sexual violence in recent years, the report described them as reactive and insufficient, warning that although “these acts of violence were in decline up until the early 1990s, they have since stopped decreasing. In France, abuse of minors within the Church accounts for close to 4% of all sexual violence in France, according to Jean-Marc Sauvé, the president of the Independent Commission on Sexual Abuse in the Church (CIASE) which authored the report.

The Pope did not directly address allegations of ongoing abuse in his comments last Wednesday, with some survivors and advocates saying that further action is needed to reform an institution plagued with sexual exploitation that has only itself to answer to.

Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of BishopAccountability.org, which campaigns for survivors of abuse by Catholic clergy, said that Tuesday’s ruling is “a galling reminder of the Vatican’s impunity, made possible by its status as a sovereign state. The notions endorsed by the ruling, that the Pope isn’t the boss of his bishops and that the Holy See didn’t authorize the bishops’ cover-up of abuse, are demonstrably untrue.”

Doyle added in a statement: “The church’s dual identity as a religion and a state allows it to shape-shift according to the threat it faces in courts … No other religious institution enjoys the same buffet of legal protections. The result is that the church repeatedly evades justice and its untold millions of victims are left to suffer.”

On Wednesday, a Vatican tribunal on absolved a former altar boy on charges that he sexually abused a fellow student at a seminary located inside Vatican City.

Fr. Gabriele Martinelli, now 29, was a student at the St Pius X Seminary at the time when the alleged abuses occurred, from 2007-2012. Martinelli was accused of molesting a younger student while they were both minors. In addition to Martinelli, the seminary’s former rector, Fr. Enrico Radice was also absolved of charges of cover-up.

The trial was the first of its kind dealing with abuses alleged to have occurred at the Vatican. The St. Pius X Seminary houses boys aged 12-18 who are considering the priesthood and who serve mass at St. Peter’s.

In May, Francis ordered that the seminary find a new home outside the Vatican.

CNN’s Delia Gallagher and Saskya Vandoorne contributed reporting.

Read original article here