Tag Archives: Laments

Pope Francis Laments When ‘Ideology Replaces Faith’ in Segment of U.S. Catholics – National Catholic Register

  1. Pope Francis Laments When ‘Ideology Replaces Faith’ in Segment of U.S. Catholics National Catholic Register
  2. Pope says ‘backward’ U.S. conservatives have replaced faith with ideology Yahoo News
  3. AP Trending SummaryBrief at 12:51 p.m. EDT | National | heraldpalladium.com Herald Palladium
  4. Pope Francis blasts reactionary American Catholics who oppose church reform National Catholic Reporter
  5. Pope Francis Says ‘Reactionary’ U.S. Catholic Church Has Replaced Faith with ‘Ideology’ National Review
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Zoe Saldaña Laments ‘Avatar 5’ Postponement To 2031: “Great! I’m Gonna Be 53” – Deadline

  1. Zoe Saldaña Laments ‘Avatar 5’ Postponement To 2031: “Great! I’m Gonna Be 53” Deadline
  2. Zoe Saldaña reacts to ‘Avatar 5’ being delayed to 2031: ‘Great, I’m gonna be 53’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Disney Reveals Release Dates For New STAR WARS And AVATAR Movies; Fede Álvarez’s ALIEN Reboot Also Dated Sci-Fi & Fantasy Gazette
  4. These Upcoming Star Wars Movies Have New Official Release Dates… Supposedly BoLS
  5. Tired Of Waiting For Deadpool 3? You’re In Luck Giant Freakin Robot
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Bengals’ Joseph Ossai laments penalty that led to Chiefs’ win

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Cincinnati Bengals players and coaches gave defensive end Joseph Ossai words of solace and comfort following a penalty that led to the Kansas City Chiefs’ game-winning field goal in the AFC Championship Game.

But in the moments after Sunday’s 23-20 loss, Ossai said it was extremely tough to process the sentiment. With reddened eyes and a soft tone, Ossai lamented his penalty in the closing seconds that put Kansas City in position for Harrison Butker’s 45-yard field goal on the penultimate play from scrimmage.

“I gotta learn from experience,” Ossai said, relaying the advice he received from Cincinnati defensive end Sam Hubbard. “I gotta know not to get close to that quarterback when he’s close to that sideline if it’s anything that could possibly cause a penalty in a dire situation like that. I gotta do better.”

On third-and-4 at Cincinnati’s 47-yard line, Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes scrambled to his right to gain a first down. As Mahomes stepped out of bounds, Ossai shoved Mahomes from behind. The two tumbled to the ground on Cincinnati’s sideline, and Ossai was whistled for unnecessary roughness.

“I was just in full chase mode,” Ossai said. “I was trying to push him, maybe get him going backwards because I knew he was going for that sideline. I was trying to make him go backwards, get that clock running. I haven’t seen it yet. I don’t know how far out of bounds we were.”

The 15-yard penalty put Kansas City in position for the kick with :03 remaining. After winning 10 straight games — and having posted three consecutive victories against Kansas City — the Bengals were eliminated from the playoffs in a rematch of last year’s AFC Championship Game.

Ossai said he injured his left knee in the incident with Mahomes. He will get an MRI to determine what damage, if any, occurred.

He also said Bengals coach Zac Taylor was among those who offered encouragement after the game.

“He just told me to keep my head up,” Ossai said. “Told me there were a bunch of different plays we had to make, that it didn’t come down to that one, and we just gotta keep moving forward.”

There were several issues that plagued Cincinnati in its attempt to repeat as AFC champion and return to the Super Bowl.

As a team, the Bengals committed nine penalties for 71 yards. Quarterback Joe Burrow was sacked five times. Kansas City wide receiver Skyy Moore returned Drue Chrisman’s punt 29 yards, giving the home team the ball at its own 47-yard line with just 30 seconds left in the contest.

Bengals defensive tackle BJ Hill, who flanked Ossai as he answered questions from reporters in the locker room after the game, said he had no qualms with Ossai on that penalty.

“I don’t have [any] hard feelings about that play at all because I knew what his intention was: just to play hard,” Hill said.

Hill praised Ossai for his efforts in his first NFL season. The 22-year-old out of the University of Texas was drafted in the third round in 2021 but missed that entire campaign after he suffered a meniscus injury in the preseason. When Bengals defensive end Trey Hendrickson experienced a wrist issue toward the end of this regular season, Ossai’s usage increased.

Against Kansas City and Mahomes, Ossai registered a team-high two quarterback hits.

“You just build that young guy up and let him understand it’s going to come down to inches in this league,” Cincinnati defensive tackle DJ Reader said. “And he’ll be there to make a lot of plays.

“That play is going to find him again. Those roles are going to find him again as a player, and just be ready for it.”

Reader said he had no doubt about that.

“This pain is going to drive him to be great,” Reader said. “He’ll get there.”

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Baker laments lack of US-born Black players in World Series

HOUSTON (AP) — Dusty Baker grew up watching Black stars shine in the World Series, paving his path to a life devoted to baseball.

When he leads the Houston Astros in Game 1 of the World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies on Friday night, the AL and NL champions are expected to play without any U.S.-born Black players for the first time since 1950, shortly after Jackie Robinson broke the Major League Baseball color barrier.

It’s a fact that deeply disturbs the 73-year-old Baker, one of two Black MLB managers, who has spent his entire life either playing or coaching baseball.

“What hurts is that I don’t know how much hope that it gives some of the young African-American kids,” Baker told The Associated Press on Thursday. “Because when I was their age, I had a bunch of guys, (Willie) Mays, (Hank) Aaron, Frank Robinson, Tommy Davis — my hero — Maury Wills, all these guys. We need to do something before we lose them.”

Jackie Robinson debuted in 1947 with the Brooklyn Dodgers and played in the World Series that year. Since then, the 1950 matchup between the New York Yankees and Phillies has been the only World Series without a U.S.-born Black player.

Houston and Philadelphia will announce their 26-man rosters several hours before Game 1 on Friday night at Minute Maid Park, and neither is expected to have a U.S.-born Black player. Michael Brantley, a Black outfielder for Houston, is out for the season because of a shoulder injury.

“I don’t think that that’s something that baseball should really be proud of,” said Baker, who won a World Series as an outfielder with the Dodgers in 1981 and is seeking his first championship as a manager. “It looks bad. It lets people know that it didn’t take a year or even a decade to get to this point.”

Indeed, the dwindling number of Black MLB players has been an issue for years. Richard Lapchick, director of The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport at Central Florida is the lead author for his group’s annual reports on diversity hiring practices in sports. He said that Black players made up just 7.2% of opening day roster this year, the lowest percentage since study data was first collected in 1991, when 18% of MLB players were Black.

Starting in 1954, when Mays and the New York Giants played against Larry Doby and Cleveland, every single team to reach the World Series had at least one U.S.-born Black player until the 2005 Astros did not.

The Phillies had no Black players on their opening roster this year for the first time since 1959. Roman Quinn, a Black backup outfielder, played 23 games before being released.

Philadelphia power-hitting rookie Darick Hall made his debut in late June and played 41 games — his mother is white and his father is Black and white, and he identifies as multiracial. Hall wasn’t on the Phillies’ roster for any of the first three rounds this postseason and isn’t expected to be on the World Series roster.

Last summer, for the first time in MLB draft history, four of the first five players selected were Black.

All four, along with more than 300 big leaguers including Atlanta’s Michael Harris II, Cincinnati’s Hunter Greene, Pittsburgh’s Ke’Bryan Hayes and Milwaukee’s Devin Williams, took part in MLB diversity-based initiatives such as the MLB Youth Academy, DREAM Series and the Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities (RBI) program.

While “very disappointed and discouraged” with the situation this year, Baker hopes the makeup of the top of the most recent draft means this will be the last World Series where U.S.-born Black players aren’t represented.

“There is help on the way,” he said. “You can tell by the number of African-American number one draft choices. The academies are producing players. So hopefully in the near future we won’t have to talk about this anymore or even be in this situation.”

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AP Baseball Writer Ben Walker contributed to this story.

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More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports



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‘The socialists are taking over,’ Whole Foods CEO John Mackey laments | Whole Foods

The “socialists are taking over” Whole Foods’ CEO and co-founder, John Mackey, has lamented in a recent podcast interview.

“They’re marching through the institutions. They’re taking everything over. They’re taking over education. It looks like they’ve taken over a lot of corporations. It looks like they’ve taken over the military, and it’s just continuing,” he told the libertarian magazine Reason in a podcast released on Wednesday.

“I feel like with the way freedom of speech is today, the movement on gun control, a lot of the liberties that I’ve taken for granted most of my life, I think are under threat,” Mackey said.

Mackey pegged the candid sharing of his political opinions to his upcoming retirement as Whole Foods’ chief executive in September.

“In six weeks, I will retire from Whole Foods, and I have muzzled myself ever since 2009,” Mackey said, referring to the op-ed he penned for the Wall Street Journal that year where he compared Obamacare to fascism.

“My board basically shut me down. It’s like a father, they started attacking the child, and I was intimidated enough to shut up,” Mackey told Reason. He compared his upcoming experience to the Home Depot billionaire and conservative Bernie Marcus.

“People were constantly going after Home Depot to get them to shut up Bernie Marcus. Home Depot has to say Bernie retired over 20 years ago, we can’t get him to shut up, you have to take it to Bernie,” he said.

“I was telling my leadership team, pretty soon, you’re going to be hearing about ‘crazy John’ who’s no longer muzzled, and you’re going to have to say, ‘We can’t stop John from talking any longer.’”

Though the Whole Foods executive has long been outspoken about his libertarian beliefs – the New Yorker in 2010 referred to him as a “rightwing hippie” – Mackey said he would be able to “talk more about politics in six weeks than I can today”.

Mackey co-founded a natural foods grocery store in 1978 that later merged with other stores to make Whole Foods. The brand expanded, buying out smaller stores and competitors, until it was bought by Amazon in 2017 for $13.7bn. Mackey and the Whole Foods brand are credited with helping to popularize organic food in the United States. The chain has about 500 stores across the US, Canada and the UK.

In his interview with Reason, Mackey criticized the younger generation, saying, “they don’t seem like they want to work.”

“Younger people aren’t quick to work because they want meaningful work,” he said. “You can’t expect to start with meaningful work. You’re going to have to earn it over time.”

Over the last few years, Amazon has been staunchly resisting unionization efforts – particularly in its warehouses – and Whole Foods has been no exception.

In 2020, it was revealed that the company created a heat map to track stores that were at risk of unionization. Even before Amazon’s acquisition of the grocery chain, the company had a history of working against unions, including hiring an anti-union consulting firm and amending the employee handbook to ban recording of all work-related activities without management approval. When Amazon enacted a $15 minimum wage for workers, including Whole Foods employees, in 2019, workers at the chain said they saw their hours cut.

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Ukrainian soldiers hold out in Mariupol, pope laments ‘Easter of War’

  • Russia tells fighters in Mariupol steelworks to lay down arms
  • Bombardments continue elsewhere around Ukraine
  • Ukrainian President Zelenskiy says occupiers must pay
  • Pope decries ‘cruel and senseless’ conflict

KYIV, April 17 (Reuters) – Ukrainian soldiers resisted a Russian ultimatum to lay down arms on Sunday in the pulverised port of Mariupol, which Moscow said its forces had almost completely seized in what would be its biggest prize of the nearly two-month war.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said troops in Mariupol were still fighting despite a Russian demand to surrender by dawn.

“The city still has not fallen,” he told ABC’s “This Week” programme, adding that Ukrainian soldiers continue to control some parts of the city.

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Russia said on Saturday it had control of urban parts of the city, with some Ukrainian fighters remaining in the Azovstal steelworks overlooking the Sea of Azov.

Capturing Mariupol, the main port in the southeastern region of Donbas, would be a strategic prize for Russia, connecting territory held by pro-Russian separatists in the east with the Crimea region that Moscow annexed in 2014.

After failing to overcome Ukrainian resistance in the north, the Russian military has refocused its ground offensive on Donbas while maintaining long-distance strikes elsewhere including the capital, Kyiv.

About four million Ukrainians have fled the country, cities have been shattered and thousands have died since the start of the invasion on Feb. 24.

“The occupiers will be responsible for everything they did in Ukraine,” President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on his Telegram account, posting images of destruction he said were akin to the “terrible times” of World War Two.

‘CRUEL AND SENSELESS WAR’

Implicitly criticizing Russia, Pope Francis pleaded for an end to the bloodshed and lamented the “Easter of War” during his address in St. Peter’s Square after Mass.

“May there be peace for war-torn Ukraine, so sorely tried by the violence and destruction of the cruel and senseless war into which it was dragged,” he said. read more

Zelenskiy accused Russia on Saturday of “deliberately trying to destroy everyone” in Mariupol and said his government was in touch with the defenders.

The Azovstal steelworks, one of Europe’s biggest metallurgical plants with a maze of rail tracks and blast furnaces, has become a last stand for the outnumbered defenders. read more

“All who lay down their arms are guaranteed that their lives will be spared,” Russia’s Defence Ministry said.

It was not known how many soldiers were in the steelworks. Satellite images have shown smoke and fire coming from the area, which is riddled with tunnels. Zelenskiy has said killing his troops would put paid to peace efforts.

Russia said Ukraine had lost more than 4,000 soldiers in Mariupol as of Saturday. Kyiv says its total troop losses nationwide so far in the war are less than that, between 2,500 and 3,000. Reuters has not been able to verify either side’s figures.

Russia calls its action a special military operation to demilitarise Ukraine and eradicate what it calls dangerous nationalists backed by an expansionist NATO military alliance. The West and Kyiv accuse President Vladimir Putin of unprovoked aggression.

There have been on-off negotiations between Ukraine and Russia since the start of the war.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said in a CBS News interview on Sunday there had not been any recent communications between Russia and Ukraine at a foreign ministry level, and that the situation in Mariupol, which he described as “dire”, could be a “red line” in the path of negotiations. read more

NATIONWIDE ATTACKS

Elsewhere in Ukraine, there were more reports on Sunday of Russian strikes around major population centres.

Local media reported an explosion in Kyiv, though deputy mayor Mykola Povoroznyk said air defence systems had thwarted Russian attacks. The mayor of Brovary city, close to Kyiv, said a missile attack had damaged infrastructure.

Russia said it had destroyed an ammunition factory near the capital, according to the RIA news agency.

Shelling in Ukraine’s second biggest city, Kharkiv, killed five people and injured 13, Ukrainian public broadcaster Suspilne reported. A Reuters correspondent in Kharkiv heard multiple explosions in quick succession and saw debris from missiles.

As cleanup operations continued in areas where the Russians have retreated, Ukraine’s human rights ombudswoman said almost all high-rise buildings in the town of Okhtyrka were unfit for occupation. The State Emergencies Service said 41 bodies had been recovered in the town of Borodyanka.

Most Ukrainians celebrate Orthodox Easter next Sunday, but in Bucha, a town north of Kyiv where Ukraine accuses Russia of killing dozens of civilians, some 50 people attended a church service, carrying pussy willow and praying for the dead.

Russia denies targeting civilians and has called images from Bucha fake.

“I just prayed today to stop crying,” said resident Evgeniya Lebedko after the service. “We have survived these horrors and we are constantly crying. And I don’t want those tears to fall but I go out every day and I smell it and I cry all the time.”

Despite the desperate situation in Mariupol, Ukraine said it was holding off Russian forces in other parts of the Donbas regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, which before the invasion were already partly controlled by Russian-backed separatists. read more

On Sunday, police in Donetsk region said that over the past 24 hours, Russian forces opened fire from tanks, multiple rocket launchers and heavy artillery on 13 settlements under Ukrainian control, killing two civilians.

Luhansk governor Sehriy Gaidai said that since the start of the war, all but 20,000 of acting capital Sievierodonetsk’s 130,000 residents had left the city. Shelling of the town of Zolote on Sunday killed at least two people, he added.

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Reporting by Reuters journalists in Kyiv and Lviv; and Reuters bureaus worldwide
Writing by Andrew Cawthorne
Editing by Nick Macfie, Frances Kerry and Helen Popper

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Russia laments ‘tragedy’ of troop deaths as Zelenskiy warns of atrocities in Borodyanka | Ukraine

Russia has given the most sombre assessment so far of its invasion of Ukraine, describing the “tragedy” of mounting troop losses and the economic blow from sanctions, as Ukrainians were evacuated from eastern cities before an anticipated major offensive.

The comments came as Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy foreshadowed the emergence of more atrocities, saying the situation in the town of Borodyanka was “much more disastrous” than in Bucha.

Moscow’s six-week long incursion has seen more than 4 million people flee abroad, killed or injured thousands, turned cities into rubble and led to sweeping sanctions on Russian leaders and companies.

In a symbolic move, the United Nations general assembly suspended Russia from the UN human rights council, expressing “grave concern at the ongoing human rights and humanitarian crisis”. Russia then quit the council.

Moscow has previously acknowledged its attack has not progressed as quickly as it wanted, but on Thursday Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov lamented the rising death toll. “We have significant losses of troops,” he told Sky News. “It’s a huge tragedy for us.”

Russia is facing its most difficult economic situation for three decades due to unprecedented western sanctions, its prime minister Mikhail Mishustin said. The US Congress removed its “most favoured nation” trade status from Russia in a further blow.

Kyiv has called for more heavy weaponry from its western allies and “ruinous” sanctions against Moscow, saying the scale of any impending Russian assault on eastern Ukraine would remind Nato members of the second world war.

“Either you help us now – and I’m speaking about days, not weeks – or your help will come too late, and many people will die,” Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, told a meeting of his counterparts in the alliance in Brussels on Thursday.

Kuleba said he expected Nato members to send Kyiv the weapons it needed, including air defence systems, artillery, armoured vehicles and jets, but insisted they must act fast while Moscow refocuses its offensive on the Donbas region.

“I think the deal that Ukraine is offering is fair. You give us weapons; we sacrifice our lives, and the war is contained in Ukraine. This is it.”

Nato’s secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, said the alliance had agreed to strengthen support for Ukraine, was providing “a wide range” of weapon systems, and would also provide cybersecurity assistance and equipment to protect against chemical and biological threats.

With peace talks between Russia and Ukraine continuing by video, Turkey, which has hosted two meetings between the sides, said images of what appeared to be deliberate civilian killings in Bucha and towns in the Kyiv area had “overshadowed” negotiations and ruined an “emerging positive atmosphere”.

Pictures and video of dead civilians, some with their hands bound, in the streets of Bucha after it was recaptured from Russian invaders have sparked international revulsion and renewed calls from Ukraine for more weapons and tougher sanctions.

On Thursday, Zelenskiy said the situation in the town of Borodyanka was “much worse” than Bucha. “The work to clear the rubble in Borodyanka has begun … it’s significantly more dreadful there. Even more victims from the Russian occupiers,” he said in a video posted on the Telegram messaging service. The town is about 15 miles (24km) from Bucha.

Video from Borodyanka showed search and rescue teams using heavy equipment to dig through the rubble of a building that collapsed. Hundreds of people were feared buried.

Zelenskiy also warned that Russia was preparing “propaganda scenarios”, in which Russian troops would make it look like Ukrainian soldiers were responsible for the deaths of civilians in Mariupol.

Pro-Russian authorities in Mariupol said on Thursday that 5,000 people had been killed in the besieged southern city. “Around 60-70% of the housing stock has been destroyed or partially destroyed,” said Konstantin Ivashchenko, who separatists in the breakaway Donetsk region have claimed is now the mayor of Mariupol.

Ukrainian authorities had put forward a “conservative” estimate of 5,000 dead in the city, which they say is 90% destroyed, while indicating that there could be “tens of thousands of civilian casualties”.

In other developments:

  • Boris Johnson is set to host the German Chancellor on Friday as they look to discuss how to help Europe wean itself off Russian gas. The prime minister will hold talks with Olaf Scholz at Downing Street, with a press conference planned for the afternoon, PA Media reported.

  • Radio transmissions in which Russian soldiers appear to talk among themselves about carrying out premeditated civilian killings in Ukraine have been intercepted by Germany’s foreign intelligence service, a source close to the findings has said.

  • The World Health Organization on Thursday said it had confirmed more than 100 attacks on health services in Ukraine, as it called for humanitarian access to the besieged city of Mariupol.

  • Australia is sending its first convoy of 20 refitted Bushmaster armoured vehicles to Ukraine on C-17 Globemaster aircraft. They leave Brisbane on Friday.

  • Lithuania’s ambassador to Ukraine on Thursday returned to Kyiv after Russian forces withdrew from the Ukrainian capital, becoming one of the few diplomats to return to the city. Valdemaras Sarapinas said: “Political and moral support is very important for the Ukrainians.”

  • Fox News reporter Benjamin Hall, who was injured an attack in Kyiv, has posted on Twitter about his injuries, saying he has lost half of one leg and a foot. He paid tribute to his colleagues killed in the attack, producer Oleksandra Kuvshynova and cameraman Pierre Zakrzewski.

Russia launched what it calls a “special military operation” on 24 February to demilitarise and “denazify” Ukraine. Kyiv and its western allies reject that as a false pretext.

The EU’s ambassadors agreed a fifth sanctions package on Russia with a coal embargo containing a 120-day wind-down period to give member states time to find alternative suppliers, following pressure from Germany to delay the measure.

Ukraine accused Hungary of undermining EU unity after Budapest said it was prepared to pay roubles for Russian gas, a Kremlin demand that most in the west had resisted.

On the battlefield, Ukraine says after withdrawing from Kyiv’s outskirts, Russia is regrouping to try to gain full control over the eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, which have been partly held by Russian-backed separatists since 2014.

The besieged southern port of Mariupol, where more than 100,000 people are believed to be still trapped, was also a target.

Both sides have continued to trade accusations, with Moscow opening a criminal investigation into a Russian soldier’s allegations that he was beaten and threatened with death while being held in Ukraine as a prisoner of war.

Separately, a social media video verified by Reuters and geolocated to an area west of Kyiv appears to show Ukrainian forces shooting and killing a captured and badly wounded Russian soldier.

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Buffett laments lack of good investments even as Berkshire profit sets record

Feb 26 (Reuters) – Warren Buffett on Saturday signaled he will stick to his knitting, bemoaning the lack of good investment opportunities for Berkshire Hathaway Inc (BRKa.N) as it sits on a massive pile of cash even after repurchasing a huge amount of its own stock.

In his widely read annual letter to Berkshire shareholders, the 91-year-old billionaire expressed strong confidence in Berkshire, saying its emphasis on investing in strong businesses and stocks benefits investors with a similar long-term focus.

“People who are comfortable with their investments will, on average, achieve better results than those who are motivated by ever-changing headlines, chatter and promises,” Buffett wrote.

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Noting generally the risks of changes in world politics, terrorism and cyberattacks, Berkshire remains wary.

Cash swelled to a near-record $146.7 billion, even after Berkshire repurchased $51.7 billion of its own stock in 2020 and 2021.

Buffett also said, “We find little that excites us” in the stock market, and that major acquisitions remain hard to come by after six years without any.

“Today, internal opportunities deliver far better returns than acquisitions,” he wrote.

Many of those opportunities appeared to pay off in 2021.

Operating profit rose 25% to a record $27.46 billion, with more than one-third from the BNSF railroad and Berkshire Hathaway Energy despite COVID-19 supply chain disruptions. In the fourth quarter, operating profit swelled 45%.

Full-year net income more than doubled to a record $89.8 billion, bolstered by gains from Buffett’s investments in Apple Inc (AAPL.O), Bank of America Corp (BAC.N), American Express Co (AXP.N) and other stocks in Berkshire’s vast portfolio.

“He is offering a story of a multifaceted growth engine,” said Tom Russo, a partner at Gardner, Russo & Quinn in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, a longtime Berkshire investor. “The primary message is that Berkshire has found some magnificent businesses, so let’s celebrate them.”

The Apple stake alone totaled $161.2 billion as of Dec. 31, more than five times the $31.1 billion Berkshire paid for it. Buffett called Apple’s Tim Cook a “brilliant” chief executive.

Stock buybacks totaled $27 billion in 2021 but have slowed in 2022, totaling $1.2 billion so far. Berkshire’s stock price is 2% below its record high.

“Buffett’s patience and discipline enabled him to make what is in essence the largest acquisition in Berkshire’s history, its own stock, at a substantial discount to its current market price,” said Jim Shanahan, an analyst at Edward Jones & Co.

‘FOUR GIANTS’

In his letter, Buffett touted what he called Berkshire’s “four giants” including its massive insurance operations, BNSF, Berkshire Hathaway Energy and the Apple stake.

“Our goal is to have meaningful investments in businesses with both durable economic advantages and a first-class CEO,” Buffett wrote.

He said also Berkshire favors an “old-fashioned sort of earnings,” including $6 billion last year at its BNSF railroad, throwing shade on companies that may manipulate their results to boost their stock prices.

“Deceptive ‘adjustments’ to earnings — to use a polite description — have become both more frequent and more fanciful as stocks have risen,” Buffett wrote. “Speaking less politely, I would say that bull markets breed bloviated bull….”

Buffett said Berkshire’s huge cash stake was “not some deranged expression of patriotism,” but rather a shield against losses in its vast insurance operations, including a business insuring against major catastrophes.

Uncle Sam does benefit from Berkshire’s size, Buffett said, collecting $3.3 billion of income tax from the company in 2021 out of the $402 billion in total corporate income tax receipts received by the U.S. Treasury.

Buffett also pledged to keep more than $30 billion of cash on hand, after long saying $20 billion was the minimum. That still leaves plenty available for the right acquisition.

“They are having a tough time (making acquisitions), given frothiness in the market and difficulty competing with private equity firms and SPACs,” said CFRA Research analyst Cathy Seifert, referring to special purpose acquisition companies.

Berkshire’s annual report, also released Saturday, included a letter from Vice Chairman Greg Abel describing the company’s commitment to sustainability and protecting the environment.

Abel, 59, would become Berkshire’s chief executive if Buffett were unable to continue. Portfolio managers Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, who invest $34 billion, are in line to oversee Berkshire’s stock investments.

The company’s more than 90 operating units also include Dairy Queen ice cream, See’s candies and several industrial companies.

Berkshire also said on Saturday it plans for the first time since 2019 to hold its usual shareholder weekend in Omaha, including the April 30 annual meeting.

“Woodstock for Capitalists,” as Buffett calls the weekend, typically draws about 40,000 people for shopping, dining, a 5-kilometer run and other events.

Proof of COVID-19 vaccination will be required to attend the annual meeting and obtain some shopping discounts.

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Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Megan Davies, Diane Craft and Cynthia Osterman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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San Francisco 49ers’ Jaquiski Tartt laments missed interception

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — With just under 10 minutes left in Sunday’s NFC Championship Game, the moment San Francisco 49ers safety Jaquiski Tartt had dreamed of since he was young hung in the air for a second — and then another and another and another.

Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford had just uncorked a misguided deep ball down the middle of the field, the pass theoretically intended for receiver Van Jefferson. But Tartt was the only one with a realistic chance to catch it.

All Tartt had to do was haul it in and the Niners’ 10-point lead might have grown to their second Super Bowl appearance in three seasons.

None of that happened. The ball and, potentially, the game, slipped through Tartt’s fingers and fell harmlessly to the SoFi Stadium turf.

“That’s a play I should make in my sleep and I didn’t make it,” Tartt said.

The Rams capitalized on Tartt’s mistake, rattling off 13 straight points after the drop to turn a 10-point deficit into a 20-17 win and a chance to win Super Bowl LIV on their home turf.

An emotional Tartt was left to pick up the pieces.

“It’s a moment a lot of athletes I know dream of, just being in this moment, tie ball game and you can make the game changing play,” Tartt said. “For me, that’s something I was thinking about all week. I know I can make that play and when the play came up, I didn’t make it. I know that was a big play in the game, a big opportunity for me and for the team and as a player I just feel like I let my brothers down.”

After the game, Tartt quickly went to Twitter and said, in part, “No excuses!! I deserve all the criticism my way.” He followed by spending about five minutes answering questions from the media and shouldering the blame for the missed opportunity.

“I see it and I’m like, ‘Oh yeah, he f—ed up, we’re about to win this game,'” Tartt said. “It hit my hands, I thought I had it and I just, I don’t know how I dropped it.”

Moments after Tartt’s drop, Niners linebacker Fred Warner reminded him there was plenty of football left to play. Alas, the missed chance to get the ball back and possibly go up three scores quickly gave way to renewed life for the Rams.

On the next play, Stafford hit wideout Odell Beckham Jr. for a gain of 29 yards, which turned into 44 yards when free safety Jimmie Ward was penalized 15 yards for unnecessary roughness.

The Niners managed to hold the Rams to a field goal, but the defense was unable to fend off the Rams as San Francisco’s offense couldn’t muster a response.

Despite Tartt’s drop, coach Kyle Shanahan was quick to remind that just last week Tartt made a possible game-saving tackle on a long pass for Green Bay Packers running back Aaron Jones. That tackle set up Ward’s blocked field goal to keep the Niners within striking distance just before halftime.

“I thought he was one of the best players on the field last week versus Green Bay,” Shanahan said. “I have loved him being on our team since I’ve been here and I know he’s disappointed in that drop that he had, but there’s a lot of other plays in that game and I’m very happy that Tartt was on our team this year.”

That’s a sentiment echoed by Tartt’s teammates, many of whom did their best to lift him up after the game as best they could.

“It’s hard to really say anything to help him in this moment,” end Nick Bosa said. “Obviously, he missed an opportunity, but there’s I think 70 other plays that I’m sure a lot of other guys missed a lot of opportunities out there. It’s football. It’s one play, and we’re definitely going to be there for him.”

Tartt now heads into an uncertain offseason. He’s scheduled to be an unrestricted free agent for the second time in as many years after posting 64 tackles in 14 games.

But it will be the play he didn’t make that will linger for longer.

“It’s a moment of truth and the moment of truth showed and I didn’t step up,” Tartt said. “I made a game-winning layup in high school, a game-winning interception in high school, so for me it’s like I know I can do it. It’s like being at the highest level of football; even when I was little you see those guys make those plays for the team, make the big-time interception and I was like, ‘I can be that guy,’ and when it was in the air, I was like, ‘I’m going to be that guy.’ I just didn’t come up with it.”



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Pope Francis Laments That for Migrants, ‘Little Has Changed’

LESBOS, Greece — Pope Francis returned Sunday to a refugee camp on the Greek island of Lesbos, the site of one of the definitive moments of his papacy, seeking to elevate the plight of migrants — what he called a “shipwreck of civilization” — to the top level of global concerns, along with the pandemic and climate change.

“Five years have passed since I visited this place,” Francis said in a tent overlooking the camp, where he walked through white United Nations containers serving as asylum seekers’ homes. In 2016, he took 12 refugees home with him to Rome. This time, he offered comfort and solidarity to families who had been stuck there for years. “After all this time,” he added, “we see that little has changed with regard to the issue of migration.”

Francis’ remarks came at one of the concluding, and in many ways culminating, events of a five-day trip to Cyprus and Greece meant to renew focus on migration, an issue he has never wavered on, even as the world’s attention has faltered. And when the world has paid attention, it has usually been in a way opposite from how he had hoped.

Migrant flows have fueled nationalist and populist surges in majority-Catholic countries like Italy and Poland. Hungary has claimed that its antimigrant policies and border towers protect Christian culture. And while Europe’s populist season has somewhat abated, a politically amenable hard line against asylum seekers has seeped into the status quo.

Cracking down on migrants has emerged as an election issue in recent weeks in France, a country with a percentage of migrants lower than many of its neighbors, even as desperate people have died trying to cross the English Channel. Britain, their destination, has taken steps to keep them out.

Belarus used migrants as pawns to destabilize the European Union on its eastern border, where Poland, far from welcoming them in, fought them off with water cannons in the freezing cold. Barbed-wire fences demarcate borders, and the bloc, in an effort to keep politically destabilizing waves of migrants at bay, has outsourced its surveillance and detention of migrants to often brutal camps off the continent.

Beyond that, concerns about the coronavirus and the new Omicron variant have led to limits on travel and to more trepidation about strangers at the door.

Through all of this, Francis has remained consistent, even as his calls to welcome strangers have become ever more discordant.

On Sunday, he argued that the intractable reality of the issue exposed both the failure of stopgap measures and the need for a coordinated global response. He denounced an “indifference that kills” in Europe, which he said has shown a “cynical disregard that nonchalantly condemns to death those on the fringes.”

He called European proposals to pool funds for measures to keep migrants at bay “distressing” and, addressing young children in the tent and invoking the images of dead children washed up on shores in recent years, said that because of Europe’s turning away, “the Mediterranean Sea, cradle of so many civilizations, now looks like a mirror of death.”

All around him at the Mavrovouni camp, Greek police and military officers stood sentry over white gravel corridors lined with prefabricated buildings stenciled with addresses in black spray paint.

Outside the doors, asylum seekers left sandals and strollers, stacks of water bottles and bicycles. They held their children and ignored stray dogs, looking up toward the white tent where the pope spoke, slightly above the camp on the edge of the sea.

Before Francis arrived, Camille Mobaki, 31, who said he had escaped persecution in the Republic of Congo, waited in line to get into the tent. “I’m waiting to see if the pope can take some of us to Italy,” said Mr. Mobaki, who has been on Lesbos for two years and who said that his applications for asylum had twice been rejected.

Inside the tent, Voldi Lang Lubaki, 11, sat with her parents and sister. She said she had no idea whether the pope’s being there meant they would be able to leave.

“Maybe it’s yes, maybe it’s no — I hope so,” she said. Asked where she wanted to go, she replied, “Wherever the pope tells me.”

Neither the pope nor the Vatican announced any new transfers from Lesbos, though days earlier, while Francis was in Cyprus, the Vatican said 12 migrants kept there would be relocated to Italy in the coming weeks. Cypriot officials have said 50 would eventually leave the island as part of the agreement.

In the years after the pope’s initial visit to Moria — the horrid camp on Lesbos that stained the name of the island, previously famous for its ancient lyric poets — it swelled to 20,000 people. Moria became notorious for abuses, violence, sexual assault, overall degraded living conditions and then restrictions brought on by the pandemic.

Some of the migrants set fire to the camp in September last year, destroying it and leaving homeless the 12,000 people, mostly Afghans, who had been living there.

Now, only about 2,000 migrants live on Lesbos in what Greek government officials have heralded as a vast improvement and indicative of Greece’s meeting the needs of migrants.

The Greek president, Katerina Sakellaropoulou, who spoke before Francis on Sunday, called his visit a “strong message of hope and responsibility that is conveyed from Lesbos to the international community.”

But the camp is a temporary one until a de facto detention center, paid for by the European Union, is built. Such centers are operating on three other Greek islands, on Leros, Kos and Samos, across a narrow strait from Turkey.

Last year, as the Samos detention center was being built in the center of the island, Jalila Sarhan, 57, from Syria, sat on a hill overlooking overcrowded encampments that came to be known as The Jungle, which competed with Moria for Europe’s bleakest migrant camp.

“It’s too cold, and we get sick,” she said, as all around her men chopped firewood or molded earthen stoves. Women, many of them pregnant, kept their eyes on the thousands of children wandering up and down the hillside.

That encampment was evacuated this year. But moving people around to different detention centers and islands, the Greek government has acknowledged, is not a solution.

“It’s a problem that is here to stay, not only for Greece, but for Europe,” Giorgos Koumoutsakos, a Greek lawmaker, said in an interview in Athens last year, when he was deputy migration minister. He blamed his predecessors in the leftist Syriza government, who he said ignored the security dimension of what they treated as a solely humanitarian issue.

The current government instead has cracked down, erecting a wall along part of the country’s land border with Turkey and intercepting boats transporting migrants from Turkish waters.

Human rights groups have accused Greek border agents of brutalizing migrants and forcibly pushing them back into Turkey. Last week, a legal European Union resident working as an interpreter for the bloc’s border agency, Frontex, accused Greek border guards of mistaking him for an asylum seeker, assaulting him and then forcing him into Turkey alongside dozens of migrants.

On Lesbos, the government spent days cleaning up the camp before Francis’ arrival.

“Why is the pope going to this part of the camp?” asked Ramat Ababsi, 25, who watched the activity around the tent on the hill with bemusement. An Afghan asylum seeker who said that he had been on Lesbos for three years, Mr. Ababsi said several of the prefabricated containers that the police guarded were unused, and indeed several were empty, filled only with bunk bed frames. “The bad situation is on the other side,” he said, gesturing to a section behind him. “The pope should be going over there.”

But wherever Francis has gone, he has implored a reluctant world to open its eyes to the reality facing asylum seekers.

“It is an illusion to think it is enough to keep ourselves safe, to defend ourselves from those in greater need who knock at our door,” Francis said, adding, “Let me repeat: History teaches this lesson, yet we have not learned it.”

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