Tag Archives: furor

Piers Morgan Sparks Furor Around Omid Scobie Book By Naming Royals Accused Of Commenting On Skin Color Of Harry & Meghan’s Son – Deadline

  1. Piers Morgan Sparks Furor Around Omid Scobie Book By Naming Royals Accused Of Commenting On Skin Color Of Harry & Meghan’s Son Deadline
  2. How a Book Publishing ‘Mistake’ Reignited the U.K.’s Royal Racism Furor The New York Times
  3. “King Charles And Kate Middleton Are NOT The Royal Racists In Question” According To Royal Insiders TalkTV
  4. The Daily Express has chosen not to name the ‘royal racists’ – to do so would be wrong Express
  5. Dutch translator of Omid Scobies Endgame talks naming ‘racist royals Geo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Memorials in US to Ukraine Nazi allies in spotlight after Canada parliament furor – The Times of Israel

  1. Memorials in US to Ukraine Nazi allies in spotlight after Canada parliament furor The Times of Israel
  2. Nazi Veteran Honored in Canada Was Part of Wave of Collaborators Harbored in West Democracy Now!
  3. ‘Canada has a dark history with Nazis’: political scandal prompts reckoning The Guardian
  4. Letters to the editor: ‘He deserves our support and thanks.’ Rating Justin Trudeau’s performance, plus other letters to the editor for Sept. 29 The Globe and Mail
  5. ‘Clown’ Trudeau Faces Fire In Canada Amid Row With India; Oppn Leader Blasts PM | Watch Hindustan Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Rollback of covid vaccine mandate met with furor at Pentagon

Comment

The Biden administration fumed Wednesday at the near-certainty that Congress will strip away the Defense Department’s requirement that all military personnel be vaccinated against the coronavirus, upending a politically divisive policy that has led to the dismissal of nearly 8,500 service members and numerous lawsuits disputing its fairness.

The agreement, brokered as part of the Pentagon’s next spending bill, was celebrated by Republicans as a victory for individual choice. It comes despite opposition from President Biden and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, who characterized the vaccine mandate as a way of protecting troops from covid-19 and preventing sprawling outbreaks that sideline entire units, undermine the military’s readiness and endanger national security.

The looming reversal — spurred by Republicans who had threatened to block passage of the $858 billion spending bill if the mandate wasn’t struck down — creates a rat’s nest for the Pentagon. Commanders whose job it was to enforce the mandate will face the onerous task of assessing whether — and how — to allow back into uniform those already separated from the military for refusing to follow orders. Managing overseas deployments, especially in countries that require visitors to be vaccinated, will create burdensome logistical headaches as well, officials said.

Congress moves to end military’s coronavirus vaccine mandate

John Kirby, a White House spokesman, would not say whether Biden would entertain vetoing the bill, the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), if as expected the legislation passes both chambers of Congress with the repeal intact. But Kirby emphasized that the administration believes scrubbing the vaccine mandate is a “mistake” and castigated those in the GOP who pushed to end it.

Republicans, he said, “have obviously decided that they’d rather fight against the health and well-being of those troops rather than protecting them.”

Privately, some Defense Department personnel were even more pointed.

One senior defense official said that when service members “inevitability get sick, and if they should die, it will be on the Republicans who insisted upon this.” The official, who like others spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the polarizing issue, cited the sprawling coronavirus outbreak aboard the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt in spring 2020. The vessel — a major power-projection weapon — was sidelined for weeks through a cumbersome quarantine process with more than 1,200 cases in a crew of about 4,800, and one sailor died.

How an outbreak on the USS Theodore Roosevelt became a defining moment for the U.S. military

“How does this impact deployments? How does this impact overseas training assignments? How does this impact overseas assignments generally?” this official asked. “What are the downstream consequences of this shortsighted insistence in the new law?”

A Navy officer with more than 2,000 sailors under his command recalled standing before his entire crew and explaining why it was not only important to get vaccinated but essential to the Navy’s mission readiness.

“I look like a clown now,” the officer said, intimating that, by reversing the mandate, lawmakers had weakened the military’s ability to enforce and maintain good order and discipline. “What happens when the next [unpopular directive] comes along, whether for vaccines or something else? I’ve lost my credibility to say ‘Do this’ when they know they can probably wait me out.”

“I have been completely undercut in trying to uphold the standards dictated to me from on high,” the officer added. “My sailors will have a hard time trusting me in the future when I say that some controversial policy must be complied with.”

The commandant of the Marine Corps, Gen. David H. Berger, gave a careful answer when asked about the legislation Wednesday, saying that as a military officer, he doesn’t have to get into politics — “nor should I.” He called the discussion about the mandate “a political thing” but acknowledged he would continue to advocate that personnel get vaccinated.

“All of us who are wearing a uniform, we get a bunch of vaccines every year,” Berger told reporters in Washington. “We want Marines to get the vaccine not necessarily because it’s going to prevent them from getting it, but it’s going to prevent them from getting sick, in a hospital, and worse if they have other conditions. So you can expect us to keep pushing for it.”

Katherine L. Kuzminski, a military policy expert at the Center for a New American Security in Washington, said disciplinary problems can arise when rank-and-file troops see the erosion of rules set clearly and forcefully by senior leaders.

“It opens the door for more pushback in the future,” she said. “The military fundamentally functions on the enforcement of the chain of command.”

Austin enacted the mandate in August 2021 as part of a broader effort by the administration to boost vaccination rates and curb the toll of the deadly virus. Since the pandemic began, 96 U.S. troops, 417 civilian Defense Department employees, 36 military family members and 141 defense contractors working for the department have died, according to Pentagon data.

Enforcement of many of the administration’s efforts to require vaccinations in other spheres of life, however, including for federal workers and contractors, have been blocked by the courts or not enforced. Most notably, a sweeping vaccine-or-test policy imposed on large private employers by the Labor Department’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration was struck down by the Supreme Court in January, three days after it was supposed to take effect.

More than 8,400 active-duty service members have been separated over vaccine refusal, according to the most recent service data. The Air Force, which has processed 834 active-duty airmen for separation, paused dismissals in July after a court injunction, said Ann Stefanek, a spokesperson. A group of airmen sued the Air Force alleging religious-exemption requests were mishandled, and a federal appeals court in Ohio upheld the injunction last month.

The Navy and Marine Corps also stopped some separations because of lawsuits. The Army has continued to force out active-duty soldiers without interruption, said Jason Waggoner, an Army spokesperson.

As Army deadline nears, about 60,000 part-time soldiers unvaccinated

More than 10,000 soldiers in the Army Reserve and National Guard have refused vaccinations, according to service data, though none have been forced out of the service. Instead, the Army has barred unvaccinated reservists from drills, training and pay until they comply with the order.

Republican congressional leaders have made clear that they do not expect the reversal of the vaccine policy to be the last word on the subject. House Minority Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said in a statement that the Biden administration must correct service records and not stand in the way of reenlisting troops who refused to follow the orders they received.

Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) went further, saying Wednesday that anyone discharged should be reinstated in the military with back pay. It is not clear how the military would be able to implement such demands or how lawmakers would force them to do so.

Those discharged over the vaccine mandate were disciplined for disobeying an order that was lawful at the time it was given. Last year, Congress ensured that any vaccine discharges would be categorized as honorable or general under honorable conditions, to avoid denying pension or health benefits to any service members who were ousted under the requirement.

Republicans have clamored for an end to the vaccine mandate since it was first implemented and rallied last month around the idea of threatening to block the new defense spending bill unless it was revoked. The idea, first championed by the conservative House Freedom Caucus, quickly found support across the party.

A group led by Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) articulated the demand in a letter to Republican Senate leaders, threatening to withhold support for the bill absent a vote to curtail the vaccine mandate and reinstate those who had been affected by it.

The Pentagon, while avoiding commenting directly on the legislation, repeatedly attempted to beat back the pressure, making it clear that Austin supported keeping the mandate in place and considered it a vital tool for maintaining readiness. In the end, Democrats simply did not have the numbers to sidestep the GOP threats.

Carol Eisenberg contributed to this report.

Read original article here

Quidditch announces name change amid furor over ‘Harry Potter’ author J.K. Rowling

Three major organizations that promote and manage the sport of quidditch announced on Tuesday they are changing the name of the game to quadball, partly to distance themselves from “Harry Potter” author and quidditch creator J.K. Rowling.

The International Quidditch Association (IQA) and US Quidditch (USQ), which are governing bodies for the sport, joined Major League Quidditch (MLQ), a semi-professional league with 16 teams in the U.S. and Canada, in announcing the official name change.

Quadball, which refers to the number of balls on the field as well as the number of positions, garnered enthusiastic support among the sport’s community in surveys, according to the groups.

IQA, USQ and MLQ made the decision to rebrand for two reasons. One was to distance themselves from Rowling, who has made several comments criticized as transphobic.

The second was to trademark a unique name because film and media production company Warner Bros. owns the trademark for “quidditch.”

In the U.S., both the USQ and MLQ will own the trademark for “quadball.” USQ is transitioning immediately to change its organizational name to swap out quidditch for quadball, while MLQ will officially adopt quadball into its name next month.

USQ Executive Director Mary Kimball said quadball has grown significantly and the organizations were “committed to continuing to push quadball forward.”

“In less than 20 years, our sport has grown from a few dozen college students in rural Vermont to a global phenomenon with thousands of players, semi-pro leagues and international championships,” Kimball said in a statement.

Both USQ and MLQ filed to change the name back in December after polling both players and fans on the idea.

The IQA expects to enter into a license agreement to use “quadball” and will adopt the term into its name in the near future.

Chris Lau, the chair of the IQA Board of Trustees, said he was “thrilled” to be a part of the movement to change the name.

“We are confident in this step and we look forward to all the new opportunities quadball will bring,” Lau said in a statement. “This is an important moment in our sport’s history.”

The game of quidditch was adapted from the “Harry Potter” series in 2005 at Middlebury College in Vermont. The sport has now grown to around 600 teams across 40 countries.

Read original article here

Disney Employees Walk Out Amid Furor Over Florida Anti-LGBTQ Bill

Several weeks ago, before the Walt Disney Company became entangled in a battle over anti-L.G.B.T.Q. legislation in Florida — one that continued on Tuesday with walkouts by Disney employees — longtime theme park executives worried there could be trouble ahead.

More than 150 companies, including Marriott and American Airlines, had signed a Human Rights Campaign letter opposing the legislation, which restricts classroom instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity and has been labeled by opponents as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. Disney, with roughly 80,000 theme park workers in Florida and a long history of supporting the L.G.B.T.Q. community, was not among them. Leaders at the Disney Parks, Experiences and Products division urged action: Disney’s name should be on the list.

They were rebuffed, according to three people briefed on the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to comply with company strictures about speaking to reporters. Disney’s newly hired corporate affairs chief, Geoff Morrell, and Disney legislative affairs executives — guided by the general desire of Bob Chapek, the chief executive, to avoid publicly weighing in on state political battles — decided that continuing to work behind the scenes had a better chance of a payoff. For weeks, Disney lobbyists in Florida had been pressing to soften the legislation.

At least in this instance, staying quiet backfired, resulting in a cascade of events that has amounted to one of the biggest squalls for Disney in decades. It has also become a high-profile example of a stark shift in corporate culture: A socially conscious generation of workers are demanding that their employers speak out on contentious social and political issues.

Faced with an employee uprising about the company’s decision to stay quiet, Mr. Chapek shifted course and publicly disavowed the Florida legislation on March 9, the day of Disney’s annual shareholder meeting. On March 10, Gov. Ron DeSantis punched back, mocking the company as “Woke Disney.” On March 11, with some employees still angry and questions mounting about his leadership, Mr. Chapek bluntly apologized to Disney’s 200,000 workers in an email.

Last week, still-unsatisfied Disney employees began organizing protests with a website, WhereIsChapek.com. On Friday, Walt Disney Studios let it be known that a same-sex kiss that had been cut from Pixar’s upcoming “Lightyear” had been restored. Over the weekend, announcers at Disney-owned ESPN protested the legislation with on-air silence during the N.C.A.A. women’s basketball tournament.

And now Disney — a company that cultivates perfection as part of its brand — finds itself in the third week of a mess.

On Tuesday, the WhereIsChapek employee protests culminated with various actions. None were particularly boisterous, although they succeeded in commanding the news media’s attention. On Tuesday morning, a CNBC crew reported live from the front gates of Disney’s corporate headquarters in Burbank, Calif.

Some Disney artists posted support on Twitter, where the hashtag #DisneySayGay was prominent midmorning. Sixty to 70 Disney employees briefly walked in a loop around Walt Disney Studios in Burbank. Down the street at the Bette Davis Picnic Area, a smattering of Disney employees gathered in protest, although they seemed outnumbered, at least at one point, by members of the news media.

In a statement about the walkouts on Tuesday, the company said, “We respect our colleagues’ right to express their views, and we pledge our ongoing support of the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community in the fight for equal rights.”

It was impossible to gauge the ultimate level of participation; most Disney employees are still working at home. Some participation was virtual, one organizer said, with employees leaving an “away” message on Slack or other internal messaging systems to express solidarity.

The creators of the WhereIsChapek site said they were members of Disney’s L.G.B.T.Q. “community and their allies.” The site listed demands, including indefinitely ceasing — not pausing and re-evaluating, as Mr. Chapek has promised — political donations to Florida lawmakers who were involved in the passage of the bill. The New York Times verified that the anonymous organizers were Disney employees.

To get ahead of the walkout, Disney held an all-company virtual town hall on Monday that was dedicated to L.G.B.T.Q. issues. (A town hall had long been planned for Tuesday, albeit on a different diversity, equity and inclusion topic.) The roughly 100-minute session featured a panel discussion with eight Disney employees who spoke about their own L.G.B.T.Q. experience and why the company’s initial silence on the bill was hurtful. Nadine Smith, executive director of Equality Florida, a civil rights advocacy group, participated in a separate discussion.

Mr. Chapek spoke briefly on camera, according to several people who attended the meeting.

“I understand where we have made mistakes — and the pain those mistakes caused,” he said. “I know that our silence wasn’t just about the bill in Florida, but about every time an individual or institution that should have stood up for this community didn’t. I and the leadership team are determined to use this moment as a catalyst for more meaningful and lasting change.”

As part of the town hall, Disney announced that Mr. Chapek had postponed a management retreat planned for next week in Orlando, Fla. He and senior executives would instead use that time to go on a listening tour at Disney workplaces, both domestically and overseas.

Disney also unveiled a task force to develop an action plan for Disney to be a more positive force for the L.G.B.T.Q. community, including through its content for families. In addition, Disney said it had signed on to the Human Rights Campaign’s condemnation of anti-transgender government actions in Texas.

To understand the furor inside Disney about its handling of the legislation in Florida, it helps to know Disney’s history.

In the 1990s, Disney was one of the first major corporations to offer health coverage to the live-in partners of gay and lesbian employees. That decision, paired with tolerance of an unofficial “gay day” celebration at Walt Disney World in Florida, prompted a noisy boycott from Southern Baptists. Disney stood firm. (Church members officially ended their boycott in 2005.)

In the current situation, Disney not only tried to stay quiet, it had given money to Florida politicians supporting the legislation, raising alarm, particularly among longtime L.G.B.T.Q. employees: Was Disney fading as an ally?

There has also been simmering resentment inside Disney over L.G.B.T.Q. representation in Disney-branded content. It did not start with Mr. Chapek’s tenure. Disney has long tried to keep such characters and relationships to a minimum. It had been decided that Pixar’s “Lightyear,” for instance, could have a lesbian couple at its center. But a G-rated kiss was perhaps a step too far.

These factors and others — the prolonged isolation of Disney employees during the pandemic, perhaps — added to an already combustible situation.

Remy Tumin contributed reporting.

Read original article here

After exit, Stefanos Tsitsipas says ‘no reason’ for furor over his toilet breaks at US Open

NEW YORK — Stefanos Tsitsipas shared his frustrations on becoming the center of attention over his bathroom breaks at the US Open, saying after his third-round loss to 18-year-old Carlos Alcaraz on Friday that he didn’t understand “why everyone suddenly is against me.”

Tsitsipas, who lost a grueling five-setter to Alcaraz at Arthur Ashe Stadium, said he never assumed that he would be universally loved but said he has been facing negative attention for “no reason.”

“I took my toilet break as a normal athlete,” said Tsitsipas, the No. 3 seed at the tournament. “Might have taken a bit longer than other athletes. But if there is a rule that says there’s a specific amount of time that you are allowed to take, then I would probably try and follow that protocol, that rule, and stay within the guidelines and try and follow it as much as possible.”

Tsitsipas added: “For me, the only thing I did is change from wet clothes to dry clothes. Apparently it’s a huge issue.”

Although he didn’t name any players, Tsitsipas suggested that some in the past have taken “more time than they’re allowed to take” and that it has been an issue for him, “getting cold, not feeling my game, having to wait more than 30, 35 seconds in between serves that I had.” However, Tsitsipas said he never complained about any of that.

“Then you have these players that everyone knows they’re taking so much time, but no one says anything,” he added.

Tsitsipas also reiterated that the accusations about him using his cell phone to text his coach at the Cincinnati Open were “completely false,” adding that it was the “most ridiculous” thing he’d heard in his life.

Tsitsipas also said he didn’t usually allow himself to be swayed by fan support, but that he was surprised by the crowd’s reaction at Flushing Meadows.

“But I feel like, you know, people, they don’t understand,” he said. “They are here for the show. They want to watch tennis. They’re very impatient, especially the new generation. They just want to get it done quick.”

Much of the crowd Friday was behind Alcaraz throughout the match, booing Tsitsipas when he was warned of a time violation and a coaching violation. They also chanted “Carlos! Carlos!” during break points.

“I mean, fan support is important, but I just need to go out there and perform,” Tsitsipas said. “It doesn’t matter at that point.”

Read original article here

Piers Morgan joins Fox Nation’s ‘Tucker Carlson Today’ on being ‘silenced’ for Markle furor, quitting GMB

British journalist and commentator Piers Morgan spoke to Fox Nation’s “Tucker Carlson Today”, telling the host he stands firm on his conviction that Meghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex, is falsely claiming to be oppressed and is implicitly accusing Queen Elizabeth II of overseeing a “racist” monarchy.

Morgan, the editor-at-large of the UK Daily Mail, said in a his first interview since walking off ITV’s “Good Morning Britain” — available now on Fox Nation — that he still doesn’t believe the U.S.-born Markle, who made those damning claims to Oprah Winfrey last month.

“I still don’t believe what they were saying, in particular I don’t believe what Meghan Markle said,” Morgan told host Tucker Carlson, referring additionally to Prince Harry, Markle’s husband.

“Seventeen different claims have now been proven to be either completely untrue, or massively exaggerated or unprovable… I don’t believe Meghan Markle, huge furor erupted through the day, I was an outrage,” he continued.

“I wasn’t allowed to have an opinion that I didn’t believe what she was saying even though it was clear in real time as I watching the interview where there were a number of things that couldn’t be true.”

Morgan referred to his abrupt resignation from GMB — which happened after meteorologist Alex Beresford, who is Black, engaged him in a terse back-and-forth about the anchor’s claims about Markle’s racism allegation.

JOIN TUCKER CARLSON FOR UNFILTERED, UNAFRAID, AND UNSTOPPABLE INTERVIEWS AND DISCUSSIONS, UNPACKING THE ISSUES YOU CARE ABOUT, WITH THE CLARITY YOU DESERVE.

“[Markle] is entitled to cut you off if she wants to. And yet you continue to trash her,” said Beresford at the time, eliciting Morgan to walk off the set.

On the Fox Nation program, Morgan told Carlson that whether or not people around the world like Queen Elizabeth II or the idea of a monarchy in the first place, the nonagenarian royal demands and has proven to be deserving of international respect.

“She’s the longest serving ruler of any kind in the world, [has] huge respect from many people in Britain and around the world, also head of the Commonwealth and primarily with Black citizens,” said Morgan. “[Markle is] accusing the queen or the monarch of being racist — that’s really what’s going down here.”

Markle revealed to Winfrey during her and Harry’s interview that someone in the royal family voiced concern what the skin color of their biracial son Archie Mountbatten-Windsor would be before he was born. Harry appeared to contend the individual was not either one of his grandparents — the queen or her husband Prince Philip.

Morgan said it was unconscionable for such allegations to be made at a time when Philip, 99, was laid up in the hospital with an illness.

During the interview Morgan also disclosed that he no longer considers his former CNN colleague Don Lemon a friend, after the primetime pundit accused him of being racist by questioning Markle’s credibility.

In a March episode of “CNN Tonight,” Lemon said Morgan committed an “act of racism” with his comments against Markle.

“I’ve seen Don Lemon at CNN,” Morgan told Carlson on Monday.

“The guy who sits in my old office, who I thought was a friend actually [said] on his show that I’d committed an act of racism… [D]isbelieving someone? That’s an act of racism?”

Morgan added his friend, Sharon Osbourne, the wife of rocker Ozzy Osbourne, was also essentially “removed from their job” for defending him.

He also discussed with Carlson the blowback he received when people accused him of being insensitive to Markle’s revelation of suicidal thoughts when she was pregnant with Archie.

“It’s not for me to say whether she felt suicidal, that’s only for her to know,” he said. 

CLICK HERE TO GET FOX NATION

“What I was taking issue with, is she claims she went to two members of the royal household — A senior aide and also human resources. And she told both of them she was feeling suicidal, and need help and both of them rejected that and said that she couldn’t get help because it would be bad for the brand of the royal family and I just find that impossible to believe.”

“[The idea] that you would have two people in the palace that would be that callous, to a woman telling them that she was suicidal,” Morgan continued.

Read original article here

UK palace silence on Harry, Meghan allegations adds to furor

LONDON (AP) — Racism. Bullying. Insensitivity.

Prince Harry and Meghan’s allegations of ill treatment by Britain’s royal household are so serious that some observers say Buckingham Palace’s silence on the topic has only added to the furor surrounding their TV interview with Oprah Winfrey.

While the palace often tries to stay above controversy by remaining silent and riding out the storm, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s charges are so damaging to the royal family that it will have to respond publicly, says royal biographer Angela Levin.

But that response is likely being delayed by Queen Elizabeth II’s struggle to balance her sometimes-conflicting roles as monarch and grandmother, says Levin, author of “Harry, a Biography of a Prince.” Yet she says there’s little doubt that ultimately the 94-year-old monarch will make her decision based on what’s best for the 1,000-year-old institution she has led since 1952.

“The queen has a motto: Never complain, never explain,” Levin told The Associated Press. “And she’s stuck with this for four decades. But I think in this climate and 2021, everything goes everywhere. There’s so much social media that in this instance, she really can’t not say anything.”

More on the Interview with Harry and Meghan:

The Times of London reported Tuesday that a palace statement had been delayed because the queen wanted more time. The newspaper didn’t cite a source for the information.

The interview, which aired Sunday night in the U.S. and a day later in Britain, has rocked the royal family and divided people around the world. While many say the allegations demonstrate the need for change inside a palace that hasn’t kept pace with the #MeToo and Black Lives Matter movements, others have criticized Harry and Meghan for dropping their bombshell while Harry’s 99-year-old grandfather, Prince Philip, remains hospitalized in London after a heart procedure.

During the two-hour interview, Meghan described feeling so isolated and miserable inside the royal family that she had had suicidal thoughts, yet when she asked for mental health help from the palace’s human resources staff she was told she was not an employee. She also said a member of the family had expressed “concerns” to Harry about the color of her unborn child’s skin.

Winfrey later said Harry told her off camera that the family member was not Queen Elizabeth II or Prince Philip, sparking a flurry of speculation about who it could be.

Harry also revealed the stresses the couple endured had ruptured relations with his father, Prince Charles, heir to the British throne, and his brother, Prince William, illuminating the depth of the family divisions that led the couple to step away from royal duties and move to California last year.

So far there has been silence from the palace about the interview.

“I think that one of the major worries is you don’t want to throw oil on the flames to make it even worse,” Levin said.

___

Follow all stories on Prince Harry and Meghan’s interview at https://apnews.com/Prince Harry.

Read original article here

Tom Brady finally reacts to all the furor surrounding his crazy throw of the Lombardi Trophy at parade

It’s been nearly two weeks since Tom Brady decided to get a little crazy by throwing the Lombardi Trophy off his boat at the Buccaneers Super Bowl parade and in the time since his drunken throw, a lot of people have shared their feelings about it — not everyone was a fan — but one person we haven’t heard from his Brady himself. 

Although Brady had some fun on Twitter after the parade by mocking himself for his apparent drunkenness, the quarterback never said or wrote anything about how he felt about his toss of the Lombardi Trophy. However, that changed over the weekend when Brady mentioned the throw for the first time on social media. 

During one of his Instagram stories — and just for the record, Brady posts a lot of Instagram stories — the quarterback shared an image where he called the trophy toss “the riskiest pass I threw all season.”

(If you can’t see the full image, click here) 

I will go ahead and agree with Brady on the fact that it was his riskiest pass of the season. 

When you throw a pass on an NFL field, the risk is very minimal, there are two bad things that could happen: It will get intercepted or fall incomplete. On the other hand, when you’re throwing a Lombardi trophy during a parade, there are multiple bad things that could happen: Brady could have dropped the trophy on his foot, he could have thrown the trophy in the water, the trophy could have cracked someone’s head open. Also, throwing a trophy across any body of water is a low percentage throw, especially when you’re drunk. 

Even Brady’s daughter thought the throw was a bad idea. You can hear her yelling “nooooo” in the video below. 

Of course, this story has a happy ending because Brady managed to come through under pressure like he always does. The 43-year-old threw a perfect pass that was caught by Cameron Brate, which was good news for Brate, because he was ready to retire if he didn’t come down with the reception. 

“If I had dropped that? I think I would’ve had to retire,” Brate said after the parade. “That was amazing. He pointed it at me. We talked about it earlier. It was a great throw. I mean, what do you expect from Tom Brady? A great throw.”

Brady was definitely aware of the risk involved, because a later video showed the quarterback laughing about one of the scenarios that could have played out on the throw. 

“If that hit your face, it would’ve been a disaster,” Brady said.

The good news for Brady and Brate is that the disaster was averted, which means the two will now be remembered for pulling off the greatest throw-and-catch of the Lombardi Trophy in Super Bowl parade history. 

require.config({"baseUrl":"https://sportsfly.cbsistatic.com/fly-155/bundles/sportsmediajs/js-build","config":{"version":{"fly/components/accordion":"1.0","fly/components/alert":"1.0","fly/components/base":"1.0","fly/components/carousel":"1.0","fly/components/dropdown":"1.0","fly/components/fixate":"1.0","fly/components/form-validate":"1.0","fly/components/image-gallery":"1.0","fly/components/iframe-messenger":"1.0","fly/components/load-more":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-article":"1.0","fly/components/load-more-scroll":"1.0","fly/components/loading":"1.0","fly/components/modal":"1.0","fly/components/modal-iframe":"1.0","fly/components/network-bar":"1.0","fly/components/poll":"1.0","fly/components/search-player":"1.0","fly/components/social-button":"1.0","fly/components/social-counts":"1.0","fly/components/social-links":"1.0","fly/components/tabs":"1.0","fly/components/video":"1.0","fly/libs/easy-xdm":"2.4.17.1","fly/libs/jquery.cookie":"1.2","fly/libs/jquery.throttle-debounce":"1.1","fly/libs/jquery.widget":"1.9.2","fly/libs/omniture.s-code":"1.0","fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init":"1.0","fly/libs/jquery.mobile":"1.3.2","fly/libs/backbone":"1.0.0","fly/libs/underscore":"1.5.1","fly/libs/jquery.easing":"1.3","fly/managers/ad":"2.0","fly/managers/components":"1.0","fly/managers/cookie":"1.0","fly/managers/debug":"1.0","fly/managers/geo":"1.0","fly/managers/gpt":"4.3","fly/managers/history":"2.0","fly/managers/madison":"1.0","fly/managers/social-authentication":"1.0","fly/utils/data-prefix":"1.0","fly/utils/data-selector":"1.0","fly/utils/function-natives":"1.0","fly/utils/guid":"1.0","fly/utils/log":"1.0","fly/utils/object-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-helper":"1.0","fly/utils/string-vars":"1.0","fly/utils/url-helper":"1.0","libs/jshashtable":"2.1","libs/select2":"3.5.1","libs/jsonp":"2.4.0","libs/jquery/mobile":"1.4.5","libs/modernizr.custom":"2.6.2","libs/velocity":"1.2.2","libs/dataTables":"1.10.6","libs/dataTables.fixedColumns":"3.0.4","libs/dataTables.fixedHeader":"2.1.2","libs/dateformat":"1.0.3","libs/waypoints/infinite":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/inview":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/jquery.waypoints":"3.1.1","libs/waypoints/sticky":"3.1.1","libs/jquery/dotdotdot":"1.6.1","libs/jquery/flexslider":"2.1","libs/jquery/lazyload":"1.9.3","libs/jquery/maskedinput":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/marquee":"1.3.1","libs/jquery/numberformatter":"1.2.3","libs/jquery/placeholder":"0.2.4","libs/jquery/scrollbar":"0.1.6","libs/jquery/tablesorter":"2.0.5","libs/jquery/touchswipe":"1.6.18","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.draggable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.mouse":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.position":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.slider":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.sortable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.touch-punch":"0.2.3","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.autocomplete":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.accordion":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.menu":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.dialog":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.resizable":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.button":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tooltip":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.effects":"1.11.4","libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.datepicker":"1.11.4"}},"shim":{"liveconnection/managers/connection":{"deps":["liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4"]},"liveconnection/libs/sockjs-0.3.4":{"exports":"SockJS"},"libs/setValueFromArray":{"exports":"set"},"libs/getValueFromArray":{"exports":"get"},"fly/libs/jquery.mobile-1.3.2":["version!fly/utils/jquery-mobile-init"],"libs/backbone.marionette":{"deps":["jquery","version!fly/libs/underscore","version!fly/libs/backbone"],"exports":"Marionette"},"fly/libs/underscore-1.5.1":{"exports":"_"},"fly/libs/backbone-1.0.0":{"deps":["version!fly/libs/underscore","jquery"],"exports":"Backbone"},"libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.tabs-1.11.4":["jquery","version!libs/jquery/ui/jquery.ui.core","version!fly/libs/jquery.widget"],"libs/jquery/flexslider-2.1":["jquery"],"libs/dataTables.fixedColumns-3.0.4":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"libs/dataTables.fixedHeader-2.1.2":["jquery","version!libs/dataTables"],"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js":["https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js"]},"map":{"*":{"adobe-pass":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/app/VideoPlayer/AdobePass-min.js","facebook":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js","facebook-debug":"https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/all/debug.js","google":"https://apis.google.com/js/plusone.js","google-platform":"https://apis.google.com/js/client:platform.js","google-csa":"https://www.google.com/adsense/search/async-ads.js","google-javascript-api":"https://www.google.com/jsapi","google-client-api":"https://apis.google.com/js/api:client.js","gpt":"https://securepubads.g.doubleclick.net/tag/js/gpt.js","newsroom":"https://c2.taboola.com/nr/cbsinteractive-cbssports/newsroom.js","recaptcha":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api.js?onload=loadRecaptcha&render=explicit","recaptcha_ajax":"https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api/js/recaptcha_ajax.js","supreme-golf":"https://sgapps-staging.supremegolf.com/search/assets/js/bundle.js","taboola":"https://cdn.taboola.com/libtrc/cbsinteractive-cbssports/loader.js","twitter":"https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js","video-utils":"https://sports.cbsimg.net/js/CBSi/util/Utils-min.js"}},"waitSeconds":300});



Read original article here

The Ultimate News Site