Tag Archives: limits

Washington limits Dr.’s license due to COVID misinformation, unethical practices – Idaho News

  1. Washington limits Dr.’s license due to COVID misinformation, unethical practices Idaho News
  2. State of Washington recognizes Dr. Ryan Cole for what he is. Why can’t Idaho? | Opinion Idaho Statesman
  3. Regulators restrict medical license of Idaho health official who spread COVID-19 disinformation East Idaho News
  4. Washington regulators restrict medical license of Idaho doctor who spread COVID-19 disinformation Idaho Capital Sun
  5. Washington restricts license of controversial Idaho doctor for COVID-19 ‘dishonesty’ Idaho Statesman

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Injuries and illness beginning to test the limits of Guardiola’s small squad absolutism – The Athletic

  1. Injuries and illness beginning to test the limits of Guardiola’s small squad absolutism The Athletic
  2. Manchester City v. Newcastle United | PREMIER LEAGUE HIGHLIGHTS | 8/19/2023 | NBC Sports NBC Sports
  3. Pep on fan sub criticism: ‘Come here and do it’ ESPN
  4. “Can do it without KDB”, “Always been better” – Manchester City fans believe 23-year-old should play instead of Haaland after win over Newcastle Sportskeeda
  5. ‘Sit here and do it!’ – Pep Guardiola explains bizarre exchange with Man City fan after remonstrating with supporter during Newcastle win Goal.com

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Nvidia allegedly threatening supply limits or even bans for Chinese AIB partners planning to launch Intel Battlemage GPUs – Notebookcheck.net

  1. Nvidia allegedly threatening supply limits or even bans for Chinese AIB partners planning to launch Intel Battlemage GPUs Notebookcheck.net
  2. HW News – Intel Arc Shows How It’s Done, EVGA Phasing Out, GPD Ally Competitor Gamers Nexus
  3. Intel rumoured to be scaling back its next-gen Battlemage GPU PC Gamer
  4. NVIDIA unhappy board partners may work with Intel on the Battlemage Series VideoCardz.com
  5. New leak reveals possible launch for Intel’s Arc Battlemage GPUs by 2024, but performance could be significantly nerfed Notebookcheck.net
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Grandma had no idea what was going on’: Drivers urge Red Bull Ring track limits fix · RaceFans – RaceFans

  1. ‘Grandma had no idea what was going on’: Drivers urge Red Bull Ring track limits fix · RaceFans RaceFans
  2. TECH TUESDAY: Why Ferrari’s Austria updates were another important step in getting the Scuderia on par with Red Bull | Formula 1® Formula 1
  3. ‘Silly’ plan debate shows Red Bull’s only real threat is itself The Race
  4. Perez can’t even cheat right – Up and down at 2023 Austrian GP Motor Sport
  5. ‘We should have come away with points’ – Albon feels Williams missed an opportunity in Austria as he pinpoints ‘next chance’ to score Formula 1
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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DeSantis limits trans treatments, drag shows, pronoun use in Florida – BBC

  1. DeSantis limits trans treatments, drag shows, pronoun use in Florida BBC
  2. DeSantis signs into law restrictions on trans Floridians’ access to treatments and bathrooms CNN
  3. DeSantis signs bills targeting drag shows, transgender kids and the use of bathrooms and pronouns The Associated Press
  4. DeSantis targets drag shows, pronouns, bathroom use and transgender children in Tampa bill signing WFLA News Channel 8
  5. Florida bans gender dysphoria treatments on minors, restricts student pronoun usage WPTV News Channel 5 West Palm
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Kate Middleton & Prince William Reportedly Have Only One ‘Off Limits’ Household Rule With Their Kids – Yahoo Life

  1. Kate Middleton & Prince William Reportedly Have Only One ‘Off Limits’ Household Rule With Their Kids Yahoo Life
  2. Kate Middleton, Prince William use one strict rule for their kids George, Charlotte and Louis; Can you guess? PINKVILLA
  3. Kate Middleton, Prince William have one strict rule that’s ‘off limits’ for kids Page Six
  4. Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis Are Banned from Doing This at Home Yahoo Life
  5. Princess Kate has a strict rule inside the household for Prince William and the children marca.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Super Nintendo World Mario Kart Ride Has Strict Waistline Limits

Height limitations have always been a challenge for some amusement park guests, as safety features on thrill rides aren’t designed to accommodate every rider. But Mario fans flocking to Universal Studios Hollywood this month for the opening of Super Nintendo World may find themselves unable to enjoy the park’s most exciting attraction, this time because of their waistline.

According to a recent report in the Wall Street Journal, Universal Studios Hollywood has warned that some guests might not be allowed to ride Mario Kart: Bowser’s Challenge, which allows guest to climb aboard a go-kart and experience the popular Nintendo racing game in real life through augmented reality effects and animatronic characters, “if their waistline measures 40-inches or more.” With the average male waist size in America now exceeding 40-inches, that limitation is going to potentially leave many guests very disappointed after enduring what will probably be very long lines at the new attraction.

In recent years, theme parks around the country have become more stringent about safety and the restraints used on ride vehicles, and it’s not just for high-speed attractions like roller coasters that can take riders through inverted loops and steep curves. As indoor rides have become more complex and now provide riders with highly immersive experiences, the technology they employ has also become more complex… and more dangerous.

Trackless vehicles now deftly weave through attractions like Galaxy’s Edge’s Rise of the Resistance with more speed and agility than the ride vehicles used on classic attractions like The Pirates of the Caribbean. As a result, while Pirates doesn’t restrain riders, Mario Kart: Bowser’s Challenge will, as there is a serious risk of injury should a rider exit a vehicle before the ride is finished. On top of that, there’s now even more emphasis on safely securing smaller children in the same seats used by adult riders, which contributes to more limitations for larger guests.

Jeff Polk, the senior vice president of resort operations at Universal Orlando Resort, told the Wall Street Journal that many of its parks’ attractions offer test seats located outside the rides as a result, allowing guests to test restraints and capacity ahead of time to avoid finding themselves turned away after waiting hours in line. But at the same time, some park visitors also told the Wall Street Journal that testing seating ahead of time can be awkward, embarrassing, and not always indicative of the ride’s actual build and design.

Some attractions, like Universal’s Islands of Adventure’s The Incredible Hulk Coaster in Florida, now offer certain seats specifically designed for larger guests. But as the pandemic-weary population is embracing travelling and vacations again, theme parks are bursting at the seams with hours-long wait lines, and there’s simply less incentive for parks to offer rides with seats they may not be able to fill every time the ride is operated.

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Migrants at US-Mexico border await ruling on asylum limits

EL PASO, Texas (AP) — Francisco Palacios waited for four hours with his wife and 3-year-old daughter at a border crossing between Tijuana and San Diego early Wednesday before going to a nearby hotel for a three-hour nap. They came back, bags packed, only to be disappointed again.

But the family from the western Mexican city of Morelia is prepared to wait for the U.S. Supreme Court to decide whether and when to lift pandemic-era restrictions that have prevented many from seeking asylum, said Palacios.

“We don’t have a choice,” Palacios said in Spanish, explaining that his family arrived in Tijuana two weeks ago to escape violence and gangs that extorted them for years for a chunk of their income selling fruit from a street cart.

They’re among thousands of migrants gathered along the Mexican side of the border, camping outside or packing into shelters as the weather grows colder.

The limits on border crossings had been set to expire Wednesday before conservative-leaning states sought the top court’s help to keep them in place. The Biden administration asked the court to lift the restrictions, but not before Christmas. It’s not clear when the court’s decision will come.

Texas National Guard members took up positions in El Paso at the behest of the state, while volunteers and law enforcement officers worried that some migrants could succumb to the cold. Nighttime temperatures have been in the 30s and will be even colder in coming days. The Roman Catholic Diocese of El Paso, where nighttime temperatures could drop into the 20s this week, planned to open two more shelters for up to 1,000 people at area churches.

Jhorman Morey, a 38-year-old mechanic from Venezuela, warmed his hands by a campfire with a half-dozen other migrants on the southern side of the Rio Grande. He said he was waiting for a decision on the restrictions before attempting to cross into the U.S. Other migrants waded through shallow waters toward a gate in the border fence.

“I want them to decide” on the public health rule known as Title 42, said Morey, who arrived six weeks ago in the Mexican city of Juarez, across the border from El Paso. He now rarely eats after exhausting his savings.

Hundreds of migrants remained in line in Juarez. Others slept along the concrete embankments of the Rio Grande.

As crowds gathered on the riverbanks, 1st Sgt. Suzanne Ringle said one woman went into labor and was assisted by Border Patrol agents. She added that many children were among the crowd.

In Tijuana, an estimated 5,000 migrants were staying in more than 30 shelters and many more renting rooms and apartments. Layered, razor-topped walls rising 30 feet (9 meters) along the border with San Diego make the area daunting for illegal crossings.

A mood of resignation prevailed in Tijuana’s Agape shelter, which housed 560 predominantly Mexican migrants on Wednesday.

Maricruz Martinez, who arrived with her 13-year-old daughter five weeks ago after fleeing violence in Mexico’s Michoacan state, said rumors were rampant that migrants should line up at the border crossing to San Diego Monday.

Albert Rivera, the pastor and shelter director, convened a meeting to tell people migrants that they should only trust official U.S. sources. He convinced most occupants, but said he would like the U.S. government to provide more detailed updates.

A Mexican woman staying at the shelter with her husband and 11-year-old son, who declined to give her name because she is being pursued by a gang, said she fled her village of about 40 homes in Michoacan state after a gang forced her brother to join, killed him, and then burned her house down. The last straw came after the gang forced her 15-year-old son to join them under threat of killing the family and demanded her husband join, sending photos of chopped limbs as a message of the price for resistance.

The woman said the gang took her husband’s refusal as an insult. “They think we are making fun of them for not wanting to join them,” she said, fighting back tears.

The pastor said psychologists had interviewed the woman and he hoped for her to be exempted from Title 42.

A Mexican man who asked that he be identified by his first name, Brian, for safety reasons, said his refusal to join a gang after seven years in the army prompted him to flee his home in Guerrero state with his wife and two sons two months ago. He avoids leaving the shelter except for quick shopping trips.

Brian said he applied for an exemption to the asylum ban.

“Desperate, sad,” he said when describing his thoughts when he learned that Title 42 would be extended beyond Wednesday. “It’s dangerous because you don’t know who could be following you.”

Under Title 42, officials have expelled asylum-seekers inside the United States 2.5 million times, and turned away most people who requested asylum at the border, on grounds of preventing the spread of COVID-19.

Immigration advocates have said the restrictions go against American and international obligations to people fleeing to the U.S. to escape persecution, and that the pretext is outdated as coronavirus treatments improve. They sued to end the use of Title 42; a federal judge sided with them in November and set the Dec. 21 deadline.

Conservative-leaning states appealed to the Supreme Court, warning that an increase in migration would take a toll on public services and cause an “unprecedented calamity” that they said the federal government had no plan to deal with.

In response, Chief Justice John Roberts issued a temporary order to keep the restrictions in place.

The federal government then asked the Supreme Court to reject the states’ effort while also acknowledging that ending the restrictions abruptly will likely lead to “disruption and a temporary increase in unlawful border crossings.”

States filed a response early Wednesday, arguing that letting the restrictions expire while the court reviews the lower court decision would cause “immediate, severe, and irreversible harms” to the states.

Though the Wednesday expiration date was set weeks ago, the U.S. government asked for more time to prepare — while saying that it has sent more resources to the border.

About 23,000 agents are deployed to the southern border, according to the White House. The Biden administration said it has sent more Border Patrol processing coordinators and more surveillance and has increased security at ports of entry.

Should the Supreme Court act before Friday, the government wants the restrictions in place until the end of Dec. 27. If the court acts on Friday or later, the government wants the limits to remain until the second business day following such an order.

Title 42 allows the government to expel asylum-seekers of all nationalities, but it’s disproportionately affected people from countries whose citizens Mexico has agreed to take: Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and, more recently, Venezuela, in addition to Mexico.

___

Rebecca Santana in Washington, D.C., Juan Lozano in Houston, Alicia Fernández in Ciudad Juarez and Tammy Webber in Fenton, Michigan, contributed to this report.

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Blackstone limits withdrawals at $125bn property fund as investors rush to exit

Blackstone has limited withdrawals from its $125bn real estate investment fund following a surge in redemption requests, as investors clamour to get their hands on cash and concerns grow about the long-term health of the commercial property market.

The private equity group approved only 43 per cent of redemption requests in its Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust fund in November, according to a notice it sent to investors on Thursday. Shares in Blackstone fell as much as 8 per cent.

The withdrawal limit underscores the risks wealthy individuals have taken by investing in Blackstone’s mammoth private real estate fund, which — after accounting for debt — owns $69bn in net assets, spanning logistics facilities, apartment buildings, casinos and medical office parks.

About 70 per cent of redemption requests have come from Asia, according to people familiar with the matter, an outsized share considering non-US investors account for only about 20 per cent of BREIT’s total assets.

One partner in the fund told the Financial Times that the poor recent performance of Asian markets and economies may have put pressure on investors, who now need cash to meet their obligations.

In the US, commercial property is under pressure from rising inflation and interest rates, according to a recent report from the National Association of Realtors. Globally, the mood in property has darkened and some high profile investors have warned of a lack of finance in parts of the sector.

The surge in redemption requests come as Blackstone announced the sale of its near 50 per cent interest in the MGM Grand Las Vegas and Mandalay Bay Resort casinos in Las Vegas for $1.27bn. Including debt, the deal valued the properties at more than $5bn.

Proceeds from the sale, which was agreed at a premium to the carrying values of the properties, will help with liquidity for BREIT as it meets redemption requests — or be reinvested in faster-growing property assets, said a person familiar with the matter.

In October, BREIT received $1.8bn in redemption requests, or about 2.7 per cent of its net asset value, and has already received redemption requests in November and December exceeding the quarterly limit.

It allowed investors to withdraw $1.3bn in November, or just 43 per cent of the redemption requests it received. Blackstone would allow investors to redeem just 0.3 per cent of the fund’s net assets this month, it added in the notice.

Private capital managers have increasingly turned to retail investors, arguing that high-net worth investors should have the same ability as pension and sovereign wealth funds to diversify away from public markets. Part of the pitch that money managers make is that, by giving up some liquidity rights, higher returns can be achieved.

The BREIT fund allows for 2 per cent of assets to be redeemed by clients each month, with a maximum of 5 per cent allowed in a calendar quarter. The fund has retuned over 9 per cent in the 9 months to the end of September, due to rising rents from the properties and dividend payments.

Its increase in value is in contrast to publicly traded real estate investment trusts, which have declined sharply in value in line with falling stock markets.

In recent years, the fund has been one of the big sources of Blackstone’s growth in assets under management, alongside a private credit fund called BCRED. In recent quarters, rising redemption requests from both funds have worried analysts as a signal of stalling asset growth.

“Our business is built on performance, not fund flows, and performance is rock solid,” said Blackstone in a statement sent to the Financial Times that emphasised the fund’s concentration in rental housing and logistics in fast-growing areas of the US and its predominantly fixed rate liabilities.

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Disney Set to Begin Layoffs Alongside a Targeted Hiring Freeze and Travel Limits

The Walt Disney Company, in a cost-cutting move, is planning on beginning layoffs, implementing a targeted hiring freeze, and limiting company travel.

As reported by Variety, Disney CEO Bob Chapek sent out an internal memo to top executives at the company on Friday, November 11, saying these coming weeks are going to be difficult ones.

The Walt Disney Company CEO Bob Chapek. (Image Credit: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

“I am fully aware this will be a difficult process for many of you and your teams,” Chapek said. “We are going to have to make tough and uncomfortable decisions. But that is just what leadership requires, and I thank you in advance for stepping up during this important time. Our company has weathered many challenges during our 100-year history, and I have no doubt we will achieve our goals and create a more nimble company better suited to the environment of tomorrow.”

During this process, Disney will also be performing a “rigorous review of the company’s content and marketing spending.” This review will be led by the newly formed “cost structure taskforce,” a group that includes Chapek, CFO Christina McCarthy, and general counsel Horacio Gutierrez.

These moves follow Disney’s quarterly earnings results that saw an operating loss for its streaming division of $1.47 billion. While revenue increased by 8% to $4.9 billion, it also saw a drop of 5% for Disney’s linear television networks in the quarter. Disney also recent saw shares of the company fall to 13.16%, marking the lowest drop in two years.

Elon Musk and His $44 Billion Takeover of Twitter: The Story So Far

On the bright side, Disney+ outperformed Wall Street’s projections and reached 164.2 million subscribers and it expects the streaming service to “achieve profitability in fiscal 2024.”

It feels as though many major companies are going through different cost-cutting measures, as this news follows similar layoffs at Twitter, Meta, and Microsoft.

Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com.

Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.



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