Tag Archives: Erase

‘Helldivers 2’ Players Are About To Quite Literally Erase Automatons From The Map – Forbes

  1. ‘Helldivers 2’ Players Are About To Quite Literally Erase Automatons From The Map Forbes
  2. In Helldivers 2’s new Major Order, Game Master Joel takes off the kid gloves once and for all: you’re gonna fight Automatons and you’re gonna like it Gamesradar
  3. The latest Helldivers 2 order finally gives us a break from squashing bugs and turns us west to stop the Automatons enacting ‘the reclamation’ and… oh, oh no PC Gamer
  4. Helldivers 2’s Newest Major Order Sends Players Across the Galaxy to Fight an Enemy Many of Us Haven’t Yet imdb
  5. Finish Them! Bot Plot Prompts Helldivers Campaign to Liberate Automaton Homeworlds Push Square

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Tesla’s stock bounces into positive territory, to erase losses suffered after CEO Elon Musk’s controversial comments – MarketWatch

  1. Tesla’s stock bounces into positive territory, to erase losses suffered after CEO Elon Musk’s controversial comments MarketWatch
  2. With antisemitic tweet, Elon Musk reveals his ‘actual truth’ CNN
  3. ‘Repellant’: Elon Musk’s ‘shocking pronouncement of antisemitism’ MSNBC
  4. By affirming an antisemitic trope, Elon Musk sinks to a dangerous new low The Guardian
  5. Elon Musk Tries to Backpedal After Agreeing With Anti-Semitic Tweet – and Fails Spectacularly Mediaite
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Little Rock Nine survivors call removal of AP African American Studies “an attempt to erase history” – MSNBC

  1. Little Rock Nine survivors call removal of AP African American Studies “an attempt to erase history” MSNBC
  2. Arkansas Department of Education throws down gauntlet on CRT, demands public schools turn over materials Fox News
  3. Historic ‘Little Rock Nine’ school pushes back on Arkansas law limiting race studies MSNBC
  4. Arkansas Education Secretary sends letter to 5 school districts concerning AP African American Studies KARK
  5. Perspective | Five of Little Rock Nine on Arkansas’ attempt to erase Black history The Washington Post
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S&P 500, Nasdaq, Dow Erase Session Gains After Hawkish Fed Remarks: Investors Now Almost Fully Discount 25bp Hike In May – Invesco QQQ Trust, Series 1 (NASDAQ:QQQ), SPDR S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY) – Benzinga

  1. S&P 500, Nasdaq, Dow Erase Session Gains After Hawkish Fed Remarks: Investors Now Almost Fully Discount 25bp Hike In May – Invesco QQQ Trust, Series 1 (NASDAQ:QQQ), SPDR S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY) Benzinga
  2. S&P 500 ends Tuesday little changed as earnings season picks up steam: Live updates CNBC
  3. Stocks Close Slightly Higher Despite Bank Stock Weakness and Hawkish Fed Comments Barchart
  4. S&P 500 Settles Higher Ahead Of Big Bank Earnings, Market Volatility Decreases – Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), Goldman Sachs Gr (NYSE:GS) Benzinga
  5. The S&P 500 Rebounds As Reasons For Continuing Rate Hikes Lose Steam Seeking Alpha
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Calculated evil: How Putin’s forces use war crimes and torture to erase Ukrainian identity – POLITICO Europe

  1. Calculated evil: How Putin’s forces use war crimes and torture to erase Ukrainian identity POLITICO Europe
  2. Russian torture: State pre-planned Kherson torture center, say lawyers CNN
  3. Torture chambers in Kherson linked to Kremlin money; Russia, China block G-20 from condemning war: Ukraine updates USA TODAY
  4. Kremlin ‘financed’ over 20 torture chambers during ‘genocidal plan’ in Kherson: investigators New York Post
  5. At least 20 torture centers in Kherson were directly financed by the Kremlin, international lawyers say in a new report CNBC
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Oil prices erase 2022 gains as China’s protests spark demand worries

  • WTI hits lowest since Dec 2021, Brent at lowest since Jan 2022
  • Clashes in Shanghai as COVID protests flare across China
  • Investors focus on next OPEC+ meeting on Dec 4

Nov 28 (Reuters) – Oil prices fell close to their lowest this year on Monday as street protests against strict COVID-19 curbs in China, the world’s biggest crude importer, stoked concern over the outlook for fuel demand.

Brent crude dropped by $2.67, or 3.1%, to trade at $80.96 a barrel at 1330 GMT, having dived more than 3% to $80.61 earlier in the session for its lowest since Jan. 4.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude slid $2.09, or 2.7%, to $74.19 after touching its lowest since Dec. 22 last year at $73.60.

Both benchmarks, which hit 10-month lows last week, have posted three consecutive weekly declines.

Reuters Graphics Reuters Graphics

“On top of growing concerns about weaker fuel demand in China due to a surge in COVID-19 cases, political uncertainty caused by rare protests over the government’s stringent COVID restrictions in Shanghai prompted selling,” said Hiroyuki Kikukawa, general manager of research at Nissan Securities.

Markets appeared volatile ahead of an OPEC+ meeting this weekend and a looming G7 price cap on Russian oil.

China has stuck with President Xi Jinping’s zero-COVID policy even as much of the world has lifted most restrictions.

Hundreds of demonstrators and police clashed in Shanghai on Sunday night as protests over the restrictions flared for a third day and spread to several cities.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies including Russia, a group known as OPEC+, will meet on Dec. 4. In October OPEC+ agreed to reduce its output target by 2 million barrels per day through 2023.

Meanwhile, Group of Seven (G7) and European Union diplomats have been discussing a price cap on Russian oil of between $65 and $70 a barrel, with the aim of limiting revenue to fund Moscow’s military offensive in Ukraine without disrupting global oil markets.

However, EU governments were split on the level at which to cap Russian oil prices, with the impact being potentially muted.

“Talks will continue on a price cap but it seems it won’t be as strict as first thought, to the point that it may be borderline pointless,” said Craig Erlam, senior markets analyst at OANDA

“The threat to Russian output from a $70 cap, for example, is minimal given it’s selling around those levels already.”

The price cap is due to come into effect on Dec. 5 when an EU ban on Russian crude also takes effect.

Reporting by Noah Browning
Additional reporting by Yuka Obayashi in Tokyo and Mohi Narayan in New Delhi
Editing by Kirsten Donovan and David Goodman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Hospitals Erase $5 Billion as Tenet, HCA Results Disappoint

(Bloomberg) — Stocks of hospital operators plunged Friday after earnings reports from Tenet Healthcare Corp. and industry-giant HCA Healthcare Inc. underwhelmed investors, wiping out more than $5 billion in market value across the group.

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Tenet sank by 31%, the most since November 2008, after its net operating revenue guidance for the year was trimmed, taking the outlook below the average view on Wall Street. HCA fell 5.7% after its third-quarter results included revenue that narrowly missed consensus expectations. Peers Universal Health Services Inc. and Community Health Systems Inc. followed them lower, declining 4.3% and 14% respectively.

Some weakness was expected, but particularly Tenet’s results were “exceedingly weak,” Raymond James analyst John Ransom writes.

Hospitals have faced challenges this year over receding Covid-19 patients and the trajectory of the recovery of non-Covid procedure volumes that were expected to rebound as the pandemic ebbs. Elevated labor costs due to contract staffing have also been hurdles. When the pair of operators posted their second-quarter earnings in July, the sector was buoyed by the results that came in stronger than analysts expected amid worries over weaker demand.

Tenet’s shares are getting hit by operational guidance that falls below estimates, writes buy-rated Citi analyst Jason Cassorla. Still, Cassorla says a big decline would offer investors an opportunity in 2023.

Meanwhile, SVB Securities analyst Whit Mayo, who has an outperform rating on HCA, said Friday that investors should snap up the stock on weakness, as the company’s results demonstrated more good than bad.

See: Abbott Shares Decline as Investors Seek Growth Beyond Covid

(Updates to market close throughout.)

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

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Are you an active couch potato: How sitting all day can erase a workout

Are you an active couch potato? Take this two-question quiz to find out:

Did you work out for 30 minutes today?

Did you spend the rest of the day staring at your computer and then settle in front of the television at night?

If you answered yes to both questions, then you meet the definition of what scientists call “an active couch potato.” It means that, despite your commitment to exercise, you could be at risk for a variety of health problems, according to a sweeping new study of how people move — or don’t move — throughout the day.

The study, which involved more than 3,700 men and women in Finland, found that many dutifully exercised for a half-hour, but then sat, almost nonstop, for another 10, 11 or even 12 hours a day. These were the study’s active couch potatoes, and their blood sugar, cholesterol and body fat all were elevated.

But the study found, too, that men and women who got up and moved around even a little more often, whether by strolling gently or fitting in more exercise, were substantially healthier than the active couch potatoes.

The results tell us that a single 30-minute, daily workout “might not be enough” to alleviate the downsides of prolonged sitting, said Vahid Farrahi, a postdoctoral scientist at the University of Oulu and lead author of the new study.

In other words, if we exercise but also sit for the rest of the day, it’s almost as if we had not worked out at all.

The good news is that a few simple steps — literal and otherwise — should safeguard us from becoming an active sofa spud.

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The perils of being sedentary

The World Health Organization and other experts advise us to work out moderately for a minimum of 30 minutes most days of the week. A brisk walk counts as moderate exercise.

Substantial scientific evidence shows this half-hour of exertion buoys our health, spirits and life span. The problem is how we spend the remaining 23½ hours a day.

“It’s only in the last five years or so that we’ve begun to understand that physical activity isn’t the whole story,” said Raija Korpelainen, a professor of health exercise at the University of Oulu in Finland and co-author of the new study.

Super short workouts can be surprisingly effective

In the past, most research examined sitting and exercise separately, and tended to ignore or downplay light activities such as ambling to the mailbox or fetching another cup of coffee.

So, for the new study, which was published in July in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, Korpelainen and her co-authors turned to a large trove of data about almost every child born in Northern Finland decades ago. As they grew, researchers tracked their lives and health and, after the group became adults, asked 3,702 of them to wear a scientific-grade activity tracker for at least a week.

The researchers could see, in six-second increments, whether someone was sitting, lightly strolling or formally exercising throughout the day. Because the trackers were measuring movement, standing counted as inactivity, like sitting. With that data, they characterized people, rather bluntly, by how they moved.

The active couch potatoes, who accounted for almost a third of the group, sat the most, lounging for more than 10 hours a day. They met recommended exercise guidelines — getting about 30 daily minutes of moderate exercise. But after that, they rarely got up, accumulating fewer than 220 minutes a day of light movement.

Another group likewise worked out for 30 minutes and sat for long hours. But, in between, they rose often and strolled about. Compared with the active couch potatoes, they spent about 40 percent more time — nearly an extra 90 minutes each day — in what the researchers call “light activity.”

A third group sat, uninterrupted, for up to 10 hours, but also amassed about an hour of exercise most days.

The final group, which the researchers rightly dubbed “the movers,” did just that, exercising about an hour most days, while also moving lightly for about two hours more than the active couch potato group.

When the researchers cross-checked these groups against people’s current health data, the active couch potatoes had the worst blood sugar control, body fat percentage and cholesterol profiles.

The other groups were all better off and to about the same extent, with relatively improved blood sugar control and cholesterol levels and about 8 percent less body fat than the active couch potatoes, even when the researchers controlled for income, smoking, sleep habits and other factors.

The lesson from the research is that in addition to a brisk workout, we need to move lightly and often, cleaning, taking the stairs, strolling the halls or otherwise not remaining still. The sweet spot in this study involved about 80 or 90 extra minutes of light activity, “but any additional movement should be beneficial,” Farrahi said.

You can also try to squeeze in a little more exercise. In this study, people benefited if they doubled their workouts to 60 minutes, total. But, again, “do what you can,” Korpelainen said. Just adding an extra 10 or 15 minutes to a daily walk will matter, she said, even if you do not quite manage an hour of exercise.

“The goal is to be sitting less,” said Matthew Buman, a professor at Arizona State University in Tempe, who studies movement and metabolism but was not part of the new study. “We can each decide how best to get there.”

Exercise boosts the brain — and mental health

This study has limitations. It only looks at people’s lives at one point in time. It also involved Finns, most of them Caucasians and all somewhat active, who may not be representative of the rest of us, and did not include a completely sedentary comparison group.

Even so, “it should nudge us to think about how we spend our time,” Buman said, and perhaps reconfigure our lives and spaces so we move more. “Try putting the printer and recycling bins in another room,” he suggested, “so you have to get up and walk there.”

“I like to remind myself to go over and just look out the window often,” Farrahi said. “The solutions don’t have to be intimidating,” he continued. “Keep it simple. Try to move more, however you can, whenever you can and in ways that you enjoy.”

Do you have a fitness question? Email YourMove@washpost.com and we may answer your question in a future column.

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An off-script Biden works to erase Trump’s legacy in Asia

Each man’s comment caused ripples of surprise to cross the faces of his team seated nearby, including national security advisers and senior diplomats. Afterward, attempts were made by both men’s staffers to clarify.

Coming almost exactly three years apart, the two moments neatly highlight certain stylistic similarities between the current President and his predecessor.

Yet as Biden departs Asia after a visit darkened by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the moments also expose the sometimes-dramatic steps the current President is willing to take to show the world that American obligations and leadership have outlasted Trump’s tenure.
If anything, Biden’s penchant for offering a more aggressive position than his government is willing to officially adopt reflects a desire to thoroughly erase the lingering memories of Trump, swinging the pendulum so far in another direction that allies are left with little doubt of his views — even as attempts by his team to explain them muddy things further.

Monday wasn’t the first time Biden has appeared to upend stated US policy. The last time he was abroad, he punctuated a visit to Poland by declaring Russian President Vladimir Putin “cannot remain in power.” He accused Putin of being a war criminal and committing genocide before either were officially declared by the State Department.

Even his comment on Taiwan this week was not the first time of his presidency that Biden prompted a scramble to confirm the United States was not suddenly shifting its policy. It was the third.

Afterward, a White House official said US policy remained the same, and Biden himself told reporters a day later the American policy of strategic ambiguity remained in place.

Yet it was clear from Biden’s remarks that at least in the broader global environment, something has changed: Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. As he toured Asia this week, it was evident the calculus toward China has shifted as that war grinds ahead.

“The idea (Taiwan) can be taken by force — just taken by force — is just not appropriate. It will dislocate the entire region and be another action similar to what happened in Ukraine. And so, it’s a burden that is even stronger,” the President said during his news conference with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.

It was a line that many presidents have toed and been criticized for before — including former President George W. Bush, who was subsequently criticized by then-Sen. Biden for using bellicose language during an interview in May 2001. Bush had said the US had an obligation to defend Taiwan if it was attacked by China with “whatever it took” — including the full force of the American military.

At the time, Biden wrote in a Washington Post op-ed in regard to Bush, “But in this case, his inattention to detail has damaged U.S. credibility with our allies and sown confusion throughout the Pacific Rim. Words matter.”

Coming later in his presidency than he might have liked, Biden’s first trip to Asia since taking office seemed designed in many ways to distance himself from the norm-busting years of his predecessor.

In Seoul, he and the new President Yoon Suk Yeol said they would begin exploring an expansion of joint military drills between their two countries, exercises Trump scrapped because he believed they were too costly — and potentially provocative as he worked to bring Kim Jong Un to the negotiating table.

When he asked whether he would meet with Kim, Biden said the North Korean dictator would need to be “sincere and serious” — conditions Trump did not require the three times he and Kim met.

In Tokyo, Biden said he was considering easing tariffs on China put in place by his predecessor, making clear they weren’t his preference even as an internal debate roils over lifting them.

Even Biden’s answer on Taiwan offered a clear break from Trump’s reluctance to offer up US military support for partners and allies abroad, particularly when he was trying to cultivate a personal relationship with the potential aggressor.

If there is a pattern to Biden’s freelancing, it is a desire to put autocratic regimes on notice even when his government is trailing behind.

By contrast, when Trump made offhand remarks on foreign policy that surprised his team, it often broke a different direction: siding with Putin over his own intelligence agencies in Helsinki, for example, or stepping over the Korean line of demarcation for a photo opportunity with Kim.

Both prompted sometimes-frantic clean-up efforts. In public, Biden administration officials have been left to explain away the President’s declarations, which caused ire in Moscow and Beijing. And some foreign leaders, including French President Emmanuel Macron, have warned against escalation.

Yet Biden’s offhand comments — particularly on Russia’s war in Ukraine — caused only a small amount of consternation behind the scenes, people familiar with the matter said, and it mainly centered around getting ahead of legal processes. Biden, meanwhile, has said privately there is little time to waste in calling out Putin’s actions for what they clearly are.

Biden’s aides have said the President speaks from the heart and doesn’t hide his feelings, leading to some of his highest-profile ad-libs.

His statements that Putin is a war criminal and is committing genocide went well beyond the US government position — but aides did not view them as mistakes, but rather as Biden voicing urgency at the dire situation in Ukraine.

“He speaks from the heart. He says what he feels,” communications director Kate Bedingfield said after Biden declared in Warsaw that Putin “cannot remain in power,” a statement that at first prompted a clarifying statement attributed only to a White House official.

Those clean-up attempts have sometimes generated backlash of their own. Meant to clarify, they often seem to suggest — usually anonymously — that Biden didn’t mean what he clearly said. For a President whose aides often appear to be overly controlling in their handling of him, it can fuel the notion he’s not in command.

With that criticism in mind, when the President returned home from a European trip that featured multiple instances of his statements forcing clean up from his aides, it was determined Biden would address the comment himself.

Before emerging at the White House, however, his team printed out a notecard with exactly how he should answer a few specific questions about the remark: “I was expressing the moral outrage I felt toward the action of this man,” it read. “I was not articulating a change in policy.”

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Whoopi Goldberg rips cancel culture targeting Pepé Le Pew: ‘I don’t know why you’ve got to erase everything’

“The View” co-host Whoopi Goldberg has come out against the apparent cancellation of iconic Looney Tunes character Pepé Le Pew.

The Hollywood Reporter reported Monday that Le Pew will not appear in the forthcoming “Space Jam” sequel. In addition, the world’s most famous skunk is “not featured in any current Warner Bros. TV projects and there are no current plans” for his return, the outlet reported.

The news came after New York Times columnist Charles Blow accused Le Pew of “normalizing rape culture.”

During a discussion of eBay’s decision to halt the sale of six canceled Dr. Seuss books on Tuesday’s edition of the ABC show, Goldberg mentioned that Le Pew was also on the cultural chopping block. 

PEPÉ LE PEW REPORTEDLY CANCELED BY WARNER BROS AS NYT COLUMNIST ACCUSES CARTOON OF PROMOTING ‘RAPE CULTURE’

“I just heard that they’re taking Pepé Le Pew out of ‘Space Jam’ and I think to myself, ‘Couldn’t y’all have just written a couple of lines to say, you know, Pepé doesn’t do that anymore because he knows it’s not OK to jump on other skunks who may not be as interested in him as he is interested?'” Goldberg wondered. “I don’t know why you’ve got to erase everything. I don’t get it. I don’t understand it.”

Joy Behar was quick to dismiss Le Pew’s demise, saying, ‘Well, nobody likes Pepé Le Pew anyway.”

“I do!” Goldberg exclaimed. “I like Pepé!”

According to THR, the decision to drop the odorous moufette from “Space Jam 2” was made “more than a year ago.”

Deadline also reported that a scene featuring Le Pew and actress Greice Santo was shot back in June 2019 but was “left on the cutting room floor.”

Times columnist Blow doubled down on his attack on Le Pew while responding to his critics. 

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“RW blogs are mad bc I said Pepe Le Pew added to rape culture. Let’s see. 1. He grabs/kisses a girl/stranger, repeatedly, w/o consent and against her will. 2. She struggles mightily to get away from him, but he won’t release her 3. He locks a door to prevent her from escaping,” Blow tweeted Saturday while sharing a Pepé Le Pew montage.

He continued, “This helped teach boys that ‘no’ didn’t really mean no, that it was a part of ‘the game’, the starting line of a power struggle. It taught overcoming a woman’s strenuous, even physical objections, was normal, adorable, funny. They didn’t even give the woman the ability to SPEAK.”

Blow also accused fellow Looney Tunes mainstay Speedy Gonzales of “helping popularize the corrosive stereotype of the drunk and lethargic Mexicans.”

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