Tag Archives: suffers

James Webb Space Telescope suffers another set back • The Register

The Near Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph (NIRISS) on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is currently offline, and all science observations using the instrument will have to be rescheduled as engineers try to repair the thing.

“On Sunday, January 15, the James Webb Space Telescope’s NIRISS experienced a communications delay within the instrument, causing its flight software to time out,” NASA confirmed in a statement this week.

“The instrument is currently unavailable for science observations while NASA and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) work together to determine and correct the root cause of the delay. There is no indication of any danger to the hardware, and the observatory and other instruments are all in good health.”

Together with the Fine Guidance Sensor, the NIRISS allows the telescope to point its cameras and instruments precisely to capture light from objects deep in space. The spectrograph operates at near-infrared wavelengths, and is a specialized instrument that can resolve light from individual objects that otherwise appear quite close together. 

Astronomers use the NIRISS to detect exoplanets as well as capture wide-field images to study populations of stars and galaxies. But boffins who were in the middle of using the telescope’s instrument or planning to will have to wait until it comes back online. The glitch, unfortunately, will mean precious observation times allotted to astronomers will have to be adjusted.

NIRISS was built by the Canadian Space Agency, and is sensitive enough to study the atmospheres of exoplanets. The first set of images taken by the JWST, revealed by NASA back in July last year, showed it had managed to detect water and hazy clouds on the hot gas giant WASP-96b. 

Launched on Christmas Day in 2021, the years-late, multi-billion-dollar JWST is the most expensive and powerful space telescope built yet. But the machine has suffered a few glitches less than a year into its operations, including a grating wheel issue that temporarily took down its Mid-Infrared Instrument, as well as a software fault that impacted its attitude control system and forced it to enter safe mode for a few weeks.

Unlike Hubble, the JWST isn’t repairable as it orbits the Sun a million miles from Earth at the second Lagrange point. The instrument has already been pelted with space debris, such as micrometeoroids. The eggheads think this latest gremlin is repairable from our home world. ®

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Patrick Mahomes suffers injury scare as Kansas City Chiefs reach AFC championship game



CNN
 — 

The Kansas City Chiefs defeated the Jacksonville Jaguars 27-20 on Saturday to advance to the AFC championship game but there is now concern over the fitness of Patrick Mahomes.

The Chiefs’ star quarterback was brought down by Jaguars’ Arden Key and Corey Peters in the first quarter and replays showed Mahomes’ ankle getting caught awkwardly under Key as both men fell to the ground.

Mahomes instantly reached for his right ankle and was seen limping to the sidelines to speak to his team’s coaches before hobbling back onto the field.

“Obviously, I have a lot of adrenaline going right now, so we’ll see how it feels,” Mahomes told reporters.

“But I’ll hop right in the treatment tonight and try to do whatever I can to be as close to 100 percent by next week.

“Luckily for us, we played the early game on Saturday, so we get an extra almost half a day that I can let that ankle rest.”

Despite his injury, the 27-year-old stayed in the game for the rest of the first quarter but he was in obvious discomfort.

In the second quarter, with his ankle taped up, Mahomes appeared to get into a heated discussion with head coach Andy Reid and threw his jacket down as he headed to the locker room for evaluation.

Chad Henne took over at quarterback and went on to lead the Chiefs to a touchdown to take a 17-7 lead.

Despite the team listing him as questionable to return, Mahomes came back in the second half and led the team to the victory, ending the night with 195 yards passing and two touchdowns.

“I didn’t want to go get the X-Rays or whatever it was. I just wanted to continue to play,” Mahomes added, explaining his argument with Reid.

“I told them I’d do it at halftime but the coach, in the best interest of me, made me go back there and get that X-Ray before coming back into the game.

“For a while, I thought I could play through it but he said he would not put me back in ‘so might as well go get that X-Ray and if it’s negative or whatever I’ll put you back in.’

“I ran back there, got the X-Ray and was able to play and finish the game.”

The Chiefs have now reached the AFC Championship game for the fifth consecutive year but there are now doubts about Mahomes’ ability to play on January 29.

Their opponent will be either the Cincinnati Bengals or the Buffalo Bills, with both teams set to play later on Sunday.

“He’s a tough kid. He wanted to be in there,” Reid told reporters when asked about Mahomes, not committing to him playing next Sunday.

“He wanted to be competing and that’s a tribute to him and his competitiveness.

“However, you got to make sure he’s okay, physically okay, where he can protect himself and if he can’t then he can’t play.

“You have to go to the next guy. He’s a tough nut and, when I tell you he is competitive, he’s very very competitive.”

Elsewhere, the Philadelphia Eagles defeated the New York Giants 38-7 to advance to the team’s eighth NFC championship game in franchise history and the first since 2018.

The Eagles came out of the gates strong and finished even stronger.

Philadelphia quarterback Jalen Hurts threw for 154 yards and two touchdowns while adding a rushing touchdown as well. Eagles running backs Miles Sanders and Kenneth Gainwell combined to rush for 202 yards.

The Eagles will face either the Dallas Cowboys or the San Francisco 49ers on January 29 for a place in the Super Bowl final on February 12.

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Bills’ Damar Hamlin suffers cardiac arrest on field vs. Bengals: Family’s statement, latest on safety’s health

A scary and emotional scene unfolded early during Monday night’s game between the Bills and Bengals. With 5:58 remaining in the first quarter, Bills safety Damar Hamlin collapsed after rising to his feet following a tackle of Bengals wide receivers Tee Higgins. After making the tackle, Hamlin stood up only to suddenly fall to the ground. He received immediate medical attention on the field and was transported to the UC Medical Center in Cincinnati.

Hamlin, 24, suffered a cardiac arrest following the hit with his heartbeat restored on the field, the Bills announced in a statement early Tuesday morning. The team further divulged that Hamlin is “sedated and listed in critical condition.”

CBS Sports NFL Insider Josina Anderson reported on Tuesday night that Hamlin’s situation is trending in a positive direction. 

“Monday Night Football” between Buffalo and Cincinnati was officially postponed by the NFL shortly after 10 p.m. ET. The league released the following statement:

Tonight’s Buffalo Bills-Cincinnati Bengals game has been postponed after Buffalo Bills’ Damar Hamlin collapsed, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell announced. 

Hamlin received immediate medical attention on the field by team and independent medical staff and local paramedics. He was then transported to a local hospital where he is in critical condition. 

Our thoughts are with Damar and the Buffalo Bills. We will provide more information as it becomes available. 

The NFL has been in constant communication with the NFL Players Association which is in agreement with postponing the game.

Hamlin received CPR on the field for several minutes while being placed on a stretcher and eventually into an ambulance. He was given oxygen upon entering the ambulance, which transported him and some family members to the hospital.

Tuesday morning, family spokesperson Jordon Rooney provided an update on Hamlin: “I can’t speak specifically on his medical condition. All I’ll say is, he’s fighting. He’s a fighter. … The family’s in good spirits. We’re honestly just taking it minute-by-minute, hour-by-hour. … What’s most important is to give the family their privacy. … His family is going through a lot right now.”

Hamlin’s family issued the following press release late Tuesday morning: 

“On behalf of our family, we want to express our sincere gratitude for the love and support shown to Damar during this challenging time. We are deeply moved by the prayers, kind words and donations from fans around the country. 

“We also want to acknowledge the dedicated first responders and healthcare professionals at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center who have provided exceptional care to Damar. We feel so blessed to be part of the Buffalo Bills organization and to have their support. We also want to thank Coach Taylor and the Bengals for everything they’ve done. 

“Your generosity and compassion mean the world to us. Please keep Damar in your prayers. We will release updates as soon as we have them.” 

Monday’s game was temporarily suspended after coaches Sean McDermott of the Bills and Zac Taylor of the Bengals spoke on the field. About an hour later, the NFL decided to postpone the game. It chose not to address a potential rescheduling of the game in a media call late Monday night. That decision will ultimately rest in the hands of commissioner Roger Goodell.

The Bills decided to fly back to Buffalo early Tuesday morning. Numerous members of the Bills and Bengals visited the hospital late Monday night.

On Tuesday afternoon, the Bills released the following statement:

Damar Hamlin spent last night in the intensive care unit and remains there today in critical condition at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center. 

We are grateful and thankful for the outpouring of support we have received thus far.

Around 11:30 p.m. ET Monday, Hamlin’s agent, Ira Turner, provided a statement to NFL Media: “Please continue to pray for Damar and his family. We currently have no update at this time. Will ask that you keep the family in your prayers.”

Hamlin is in the middle of his second season with the Bills. He earned a spot in Buffalo’s starting lineup this season after appearing in 14 games as a rookie. Hamlin played collegiately at Pittsburgh, where he tallied 276 tackles and six interceptions. 

Hamlin’s character and work ethic led to him making the Bills’ 53-man roster as a rookie despite being a Day 3 draft pick. That same work ethic helped him become a starter this season. 

“Damar’s done a great job,” Bills GM Brandon Beane said of Hamlin during his rookie training camp. “He’s a very instinctive player. … He’s a great kid, he wants it, he’s working hard and he’s giving himself every chance to put himself in the mix despite being a sixth-round pick.”

Bengals owner Mike Brown released a statement, offering support and commenting on how everyone in the stadium handled the “unprecedented” and scary scene.

Hamlin’s injury has led to an outpouring of emotion and support throughout the sports world. Every NFL team has offered their thoughts via social media. Scores of players have also voiced their support for Hamlin and his Buffalo teammates. 

CBS Sports will provide more information on Hamlin as soon as it is made available.

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Residents asked to conserve water as Jackson suffers setback at Curtis plant

JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) – Customers can expect pressure fluctuation through the next 24 hours as the city of Jackson’s water system has experienced a setback at the O.B. Curtis Water Treatment Plant Saturday night.

Crews spent New Year’s Day working to get back on track.

“The water system was showing signs of recovery and had reached 80 PSI by the end of the day Saturday,” Interim Third-Party Manager Ted Henifin said in an email on Sunday. “The elevated tanks had started to fill for the first time since Christmas.”

However, he said “overnight process challenges” at Curtis, Jackson’s main treatment plant, stalled that process.

“As a result, the distribution system lost pressure and most of the gains reported,” he said. “Many customers who had water restored [on Saturday] have lost pressure again.”

Curtis is Jackson’s main water treatment facility, serving approximately 43,000 connections across the city, in Byram, and parts of Hinds County.

Problems occurred on the plant’s conventional treatment side. Details of the setback were under investigation. “It’s now running again,” Henifin said. “We don’t know what happened. We’re trying to figure it out.”

Areas impacted primarily include west, central, and south Jackson, as well as elevated areas in the capital city.

“Staff at O.B. Curtis are working diligently to fully recover the process and expect to make gains again late today,” Henifin wrote. “The current goal is to restore system pressure fully by Monday evening into early Tuesday morning.”

Pressure needs to be above 80 PSI, or pounds per square inch, to ensure all customers in the city have water. Pressure needs to be around 20 PSI at each connection before officials can begin testing to have boil water notices lifted.

As Jackson continues recovery efforts, the precautionary boil notice remains in place for much of the city, with the exception of those homes and businesses in the 39211 zip code.

“All customers with water are encouraged to conserve as much as possible to speed the recovery to those without water,” Henifin wrote.

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Woman suffers from sepsis and HEART FAILURE weeks after recovering from COVID-19

A woman was left fighting for her life after she started suffering from sepsis and heart failure weeks after recovering from COVID-19 – which resulted in her spending 10 days in a coma. 

Jamie Waddell, 36, from Springfield, Illinois, tested positive for COVID-19 back in August.

She suffered from ‘body aches, fatigue, fever, and sinus congestion’ for about 10 days before she started to feel better.

After recovering, the 36-year-old returned back to work – but a few weeks later, she suddenly started to feel dizzy and lightheaded while out for a walk.

A woman was left fighting for her life after she started suffering from sepsis and heart failure weeks after recovering from COVID-19, which resulted in her spending 10 days in a coma

Jamie Waddell, 36, from Springfield, Illinois, tested positive for COVID-19 back in August, and she suffered from ‘body aches, fatigue, fever, and sinus congestion’ for about 10 days

After recovering, the 36-year-old returned back to work, but a few weeks later, she suddenly started to feel dizzy and lightheaded while out for a walk

Jamie brushed it off, but in the days that followed, she began suffering from ‘overwhelmingly bad’ fatigue which left her ‘barely’ able to move.

She decided to go to the emergency room, and was stunned when doctors told her that she had pneumonia, heart failure and sepsis

She decided to go to the emergency room, and was stunned when doctors told her that she had pneumonia, heart failure and sepsis – all likely caused by the COVID-19 weeks earlier.

By the time she arrived at the hospital, Jamie’s ‘heart and lungs were basically not working’ anymore and her ‘blood pressure and oxygen levels were really low.’

Doctors quickly implanted a device known as an Impella to help her heart pump blood, but they feared she might need a transplant.

She was in a coma for 10 days, but ‘miraculously’ got better on her own. And now, she’s sharing her story as a warning to others.

Jamie – who is vaccinated and boosted – recently spoke to the Today show about the horrifying ordeal, and she recalled feeling surprised over how sick she felt when she caught COVID-19 four months ago.

‘Body aches, fatigue, fever, your respiratory stuff, sinus congestion – I was sick for about 10 days before I started to feel better,’ she said. ‘I did start to feel better. I was back to work.’

By the time she arrived at the hospital, Jamie’s ‘heart and lungs were basically not working’ anymore and her ‘blood pressure and oxygen levels were really low’

She was in a coma for 10 days, but ‘miraculously’ got better. And now, she’s sharing her story as a warning to others

The 36-year-old described herself as someone who is ‘very active with no health history’ and said she normally walks three to five miles a day 

What is sepsis?  

Sepsis is the body’s extreme response to an infection. 

It happens when an infection you already have triggers a chain reaction throughout your body.

Without timely treatment, sepsis can rapidly lead to tissue damage, organ failure and death.

Symptoms include high heart rate or weak pulse, fever, shivering or feeling very cold, confusion or disorientation, shortness of breath, extreme pain or discomfort, and clammy or sweaty skin.

Source: CDC

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The 36-year-old – who described herself as someone who is ‘very active with no health history’ – normally walks three to five miles a day, but just after Labor Day when she was finishing up one of her daily walks she said she started to feel ‘very faint.’

‘I was walking down the street going, “Oh God, don’t pass out,”‘ she remembered. ‘That’s unusual for me. I am pretty active.

‘[But I thought], “Maybe I just took too long of a walk.” It was fairly warm that day. I didn’t think anything of it and went to work the next day.’

But as she started to get more and more ill, she decided to go to the hospital.

‘At that point, I knew something was wrong. You’re not getting better, you’re just feeling bad. You can barely move,’ she continued.

‘Based on the fact that I kept feeling worse and worse, I’m guessing my heart function had probably been declining over that whole week, and by the time I got to the ER, I was septic.

‘They did an echocardiogram. My heart function was really low. I was in heart failure.’

Doctors were sure Jamie would need a heart transplant, but she thankfully started to improve on her own.

‘We were amazed,’ one of her doctors, Dr. Bow ‘Ben’ Chung, told the outlet. ‘It was miraculous.’

Jamie – who is vaccinated and boosted – recently spoke to the Today show about the horrifying ordeal

She spent almost three weeks in total in the hospital, and during that time, she lost a lot of muscle which resulted in her having trouble walking at first. She is seen with her boyfriend

She needed to do physical therapy to regain her strength afterwards, but she has now fully recovered. She is seen in October, one month after the incident

Jamie spent almost three weeks in total in the hospital and during that time, she lost a lot of muscle which resulted in her having trouble walking at first.

She needed to do physical therapy to regain her strength afterwards – but she has now fully recovered.

As for the biggest lesson she learned from the incident – don’t push yourself too hard and too fast after recovering from an illness. 

‘I work too much. If you’re not feeling good, you should take the time to rest,’ she stressed. ‘Appreciate your body for what it can do.’

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Match stopped after AJ Styles suffers apparent injury at WWE house show

Well, this doesn’t look good at all.

During WWE’s house show tonight (Dec. 29) in Hershey, Pennsylvania, AJ Styles teamed up with Luke Gallows and Karl Anderson to take on The Judgment Day in a six man tag team match. Based on fan accounts on site, Styles appears to have injured his left leg or ankle after doing a spot over the top rope to the floor outside.

The match was stopped and Styles remained sitting down while WWE officials checked him out. He was eventually helped up and walked to the back with assistance from multiple people.

It looked like WWE was moving Styles and his stablemates in The O.C. in a new direction following an extended TV feud with The Judgment Day. Whatever plans WWE had for the group heading into Royal Rumble 2023 will likely be put on hold if Styles is forced to miss an extended period of time due to injury.

We’ll bring you more on this story as we have it, Cagesiders.

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China’s trade suffers worst slump in 2-1/2 yrs as COVID woes, feeble demand take toll

  • China’s exports worst since Feb. 2020, miss forecast
  • Imports fall steepest since May 2020 on sluggish demand
  • Global economic slowdown, China’s COVID woes heap pressure
  • Politburo meet points to domestic demand key driver in 2023, analyst says

BEIJING, Dec 7 (Reuters) – China’s exports and imports shrank at their steepest pace in at least 2-1/2 years in November, as feeble global and domestic demand, COVID-led production disruptions and a property slump at home piled pressure on the world’s second-biggest economy.

The downturn was much worse than markets had forecast, and economists are predicting a further period of declining exports, underlining a sharp retreat in world trade as consumers and businesses slash spending in response to central banks’ aggressive moves to tame inflation.

Exports contracted 8.7% in November from a year earlier, a sharper fall from a 0.3% loss in October and marked the worst performance since February 2020, official data showed on Wednesday. They were well below analysts’ expectations for a 3.5% decline.

Beijing is moving to ease some of its stringent pandemic-era restrictions, but outbound shipments have been losing steam since August as surging inflation, sweeping interest rate increases across many countries and the Ukraine crisis have pushed the global economy to the brink of recession.

Exports are likely to shrink further over coming quarters, Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China Economist at Capital Economics, said in a note.

“Outbound shipments will receive a limited boost from the easing of (China’s) virus restrictions, which are no longer a major constraint on the ability of manufacturers to meet orders,” he said.

“Of much greater consequence will be the downturn in global demand for Chinese goods due to the reversal in pandemic-era demand and the coming global recession.”

Responding to the broadening pressure on China’s economy, state media reported on Wednesday that a high-level meeting of the ruling Communist Party held on the previous day had emphasised the government’s focus in 2023 will be on stabilising growth, promoting domestic demand and opening up to the outside world.

“The Politburo meeting held yesterday points to domestic demand as the major driver for growth for the next year, and the fiscal policy will remain proactive to support demand,” said Hao Zhou, chief economist at Guotai Junan International

Reuters Graphics

‘BUMPY REOPENING’

Almost three years of pandemic controls have exacted a heavy economic toll and caused widespread frustration and fatigue in China.

The widespread COVID curbs hurt importers too. Inbound shipments were down sharply by 10.6% from a 0.7% drop in October, weaker than a forecast 6.0% decline. The downturn was the worst since May 2020, partly also reflecting a high year-earlier base for comparison.

Imports of soybeans and iron ore fell in November from a year earlier while those of crude oil and copper rose.

This resulted in a narrower trade surplus of $69.84 billion, compared with a $85.15 billion surplus in October and marked the lowest since April when Shanghai was under lockdown. Analysts had forecast a $78.1 billion surplus.

The government has responded to the weakening economic growth by rolling out a flurry of policy measures over recent months, including cutting the amount of cash that banks must hold as reserves and loosening financing curbs to rescue the property sector.

But analysts remain sceptical the steps could achieve quick results, as the full-blown relaxation of pandemic controls will take more time and as both domestic and external demand remains weak.

Many businesses are struggling to recover, while surveys last week on factory activity in China and globally suggested many more months of hard grind ahead.

Apple supplier Foxconn (2317.TW) said that revenue in November dropped 11.4% year-on-year, after production problems related to COVID controls at the world’s biggest iPhone factory in Zhengzhou.

“The shift away from zero-COVID and step up in support for the property sector will eventually drive a recovery in domestic demand but probably not until the second half of next year,” Evans-Pritchard said.

With the Chinese yuan already down sharply this year, policymakers’ room for manoeuvre is also limited as hefty monetary policy stimulus at home at a time of rapidly rising interest rates globally could trigger large scale capital outflows.

The Ukraine war, which sparked a surge in already high inflation globally, has intensified geopolitical tensions and further undermined the business outlook.

China’s economy grew just 3% in the first three quarters of this year, well below the annual target of around 5.5%. Full-year growth is widely expected by analysts to be just over 3%.

Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, cautioned about China’s “bumpy reopening” process.

“As global demand weakens in 2023, China will have to rely more on domestic demand,” he said.

Reporting by Ellen Zhang and Ryan Woo; Editing by Shri Navaratnam

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Trump news – latest: Donald Trump suffers Mar-a-Lago defeat as he claims Jan 6 rioters are treated ‘unconstitutionally’

Mike Pence admits he was ‘angered’ by Trump’s Jan 6 tweet

Donald Trump promised to build his presidential campaign around the rioters who stormed the Capitol on 6 January, while claiming that the people facing charges and prison time over the violent insurrection are being treated “unconstitutionally”.

“People have been treated unconstitutionally, in my opinion, and very, very unfairly, and we’re going to get to the bottom of it,” he said in a video screened on Thursday night at a fundraiser for families of those charged in attacking the Capitol. The country, he cautioned, “is going communist.”

Earlier the former president took to Truth Social to defend hosting the rapper formerly known as Kanye West at Mar-a-Lago, writing that “the story in AP, written by the untalented and very unreliable Jill Colvin, who I unfortunately got to know at the White House, is Fake News”.

Mr Trump didn’t mention Ye’s latest antisemitic comments on Infowars in which he praised Adolf Hitler and the Nazis.

“I see good things about Hitler,” Ye told host Alex Jones.

Late on Thursday, an appeals court dealt a blow to Mr Trump in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case.

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Trump lashes out at Kanye West as aides rush to reinstate guardrails at Mar-a-Lago

The backlash over former president Donald Trump’s pre-Thanksgiving meal with antisemitic rapper Kanye West and white nationalist Nick Fuentes has led the twice-impeached ex-president’s aides to revive a 2020-era measure used to keep him from embarrassing himself while Mr Trump is reportedly blaming the disgraced musician for the negative press.

According to a source who spoke to NBC News, Mr Trump has directed his anger at Mr West, who just two years ago waged a third-party presidential campaign aimed at siphoning votes off from Joe Biden to help the then-president win reelection.

“He tried to f*** me. He’s crazy. He can’t beat me,” the ex-president said, referring to Mr West’s stated intention to mount another campaign for the presidency with an eye towards the 2024 general election.

According to reports, it was Mr West who brought Mr Fuentes, a Holocaust denier and white nationalist who has long been one of Mr Trump’s most vocal supporters, to the ex-president’s Mar-a-Lago club last week.

Andrew Feinberg2 December 2022 13:00

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Donald Trump promises to defend Jan 6 rioters during campaign, labels arrests ‘unconstitutional’

Donald Trump promised to build his presidential campaign around the rioters who stormed the Capitol on 6 January, while claiming that the people facing charges and prison time over the violent insurrection are being treated “unconstitutionally”.

“What they’ve done to torment people and go after people like never before, I don’t think anything like this has ever happened in our country before certainly not to this extent,” said the former president in a video screened on Thursday night at a fundraiser for families of those charged in attacking the Capitol. “And you look at other groups which have done terrible things and virtually nothing happened to them. So it’s a very unfair situation and we’re going to be as you know looking into it and talking about it very, very strongly in the coming weeks months and over the next period of a year, year and half, during the campaign.”

“People have been treated unconstitutionally, in my opinion, and very, very unfairly, and we’re going to get to the bottom of it,” he said. The country, he cautioned, “is going communist.”

Johanna Chisholm2 December 2022 12:40

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VOICES: Three of the last ‘normal’ Republican senators make their last stand

This week, the Senate voted to pass the Respect for Marriage Act to officially codify protections for same-sex and interracially-married couples across the country. It came thanks to months of hard negotiating by a bipartisan coterie, including Democrats Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, as well as Republicans Thom Tillis of North Carolina, Rob Portman of Ohio and Susan Collins of Maine.

Unsurprisingly, every Democrat present voted for the legislation (Senator Raphael Warnock was back in Georgia fighting Herschel Walker to secure a full term). But along with the three who negotiated it, more than a few Republicans present voted to codify same-sex marriage: Joni Ernst of Iowa, Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, Roy Blunt of Missouri, Richard Burr of North Carolina, Mitt Romney of Utah, Todd Young of Indiana; and Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan.

That breakdown is incredibly telling. Of the ten Republicans who voted for the legislation, three – Mr Portman, Mr Blunt and Mr Burr – are retiring at the end of this Congress. In these times, all of them count as what some today would consider “normal Republicans”.

Eric Garcia2 December 2022 12:00

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Republicans attack Trump for meeting with Fuentes

Republicans have attacked Mr Trump’s decision to meet with Mr Fuentes, who has been a leading voice in the so-called “Stop the Steal” moment, and who attended the now notorious far right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017.

“There is no room in the Republican Party for antisemitism or white supremacy,” said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. “And anyone meeting with people advocating that point of view, in my judgment, are highly unlikely to ever be elected president of the United States.”

House minority leader Kevin McCarthy said: “I don’t think anybody should be spending any time with Nick Fuentes. He has no place in this Republican Party. I think President Trump came out four times and condemned him and didn’t know who he was.”

Former vice president Mike Pence, who is another possible challenger in 2024, voiced a similar criticism.

“Trump was wrong to give a white nationalist, an antisemite and Holocaust denier a seat at the table,” Mr Pence said.

“And I think he should apologise for it, and he should denounce those individuals and their hateful rhetoric without qualification.”

Andrew Buncombe2 December 2022 11:00

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Ivanka has abandoned him and Melania has White House PTSD: What Trump’s family really think of a second term

Donald Trump announced a new run for the White House in 2024 on Tuesday evening, unmoved by some disastrous midterm elections results in which many of his most high-profile candidates lost their races.

While the Republican Party had been loudly predicting a “red wave” on Election Day, flooding the House of Representatives and Senate with conservatives in order to effectively disable Joe Biden’s legislative agenda, what actually happened was less a wave, more a light splash.

The Democrats instead retained control of the upper chamber of Congress while the GOP appears likely to obtain only a tiny majority in the House, sparking an outbreak of acrimonious finger-pointing, excuses and scapegoating among right-leaning lawmakers. Marjorie Taylor Greene has talked of a “civil war” erupting between traditional Republicans and the Maga movement, with much of the blame laid squarely at Mr Trump’s Palm Beach door.

Joe Sommerlad2 December 2022 10:00

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A white nationalist and a 2024 rival: What happened at Trump’s dinner with Nick Fuentes and Kanye West?

Donald Trump once again finds himself in hot water – this time even incurring the disapproval of his fellow Republicans – for sitting down to dinner at his Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida, with the increasingly wayward Kanye West and the rapper’s “campaign adviser” Nick Fuentes.

Mr West, an acclaimed rapper now going by the name Ye who recently torpedoed his music career by launching into a string of bizarre antisemitic rants on social media, causing his commercial sponsors to desert him in droves, has previously sought out Mr Trump at Trump Tower in New York City and at the White House during his presidency on a whim.

Now plotting a hopelessly unlikely presidential run in 2024 – theoretically pitching him against Mr Trump – West again sought out the one-term president and former luxury real estate magnate, this time for advice on that project.

They sat down to dinner at Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday 22 November with another man in attendance, the notorious white nationalist and Holocaust-denier Mr Fuentes, whom Mr Trump has subsequently claimed not to have previously known or recognised.

Joe Sommerlad, Andrew Naughtie2 December 2022 09:00

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“I had never heard of the mam,’ Trump tells Fox News Nick Fuentes

Mr Trump has sought to brush off the controversy over the visit to Mar-a-Lago of the 24-year-old Nick Fuentes, a very popular livestreamer and YouTuber who often expresses views that are racist and antisemitic. He was accompanied by Kanye West, who has said several times he is suffering from mental health issues.

“I had never heard of the man,” Mr Trump told Fox News, of Mr Fuentes. “I had no idea what his views were, and they weren’t expressed at the table in our very quick dinner, or it wouldn’t have been accepted.”

The former president added that West, who has changed his name to Ye wanted to speak with him for “advice”, saying he had heard the artist and supporter had “had difficulties, including financial difficulties”.

Andrew Buncombe2 December 2022 08:00

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Worker pleads guilty in election equipment tampering case

A former elections manager who prosecutors say assisted in a security breach of voting equipment in a Colorado county pleaded guilty on Wednesday under a plea agreement that requires her to testify against her former boss.

Sandra Brown is one of two employees accused of helping Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters allow a copy of a hard drive to be made during an update of election equipment last year in search of proof of the false conspiracy theories spun by former President Donald Trump.

Brown, 45, pleaded guilty to attempting to influence a public servant, a felony, and official misconduct, a misdemeanor, but will not be sentenced until right after she testifies at Peters’ trial next year so her performance on the witness stand can be considered.

“There were things going on that I should have questioned and I didn’t,” Brown told Judge Matthew Barrett.

In August, Peters’ chief deputy, Belinda Knisley, also pleaded guilty under a deal that required her to testify against Peters. She only pleaded guilty to misdemeanor counts and was immediately sentenced to two years of unsupervised probation.

Peters gained national prominence by promoting conspiracy theories about voting machines and lost a bid to become the Republican candidate for Colorado’s secretary of state, who oversees elections, earlier this year. She is charged with three counts of attempting to influence a public servant, criminal impersonation, two counts of conspiracy to commit criminal impersonation, one count of identity theft, first-degree official misconduct, violation of duty and failing to comply with the secretary of state.

The Associated Press2 December 2022 07:00

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VIDEO: Trump’s Tax Returns Are Handed Over to House Committee

Trump’s Tax Returns Are Handed Over to House Committee

Gustaf Kilander2 December 2022 06:00

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Tax fraud case only trial to arise from Manhattan district attorney’s three-year investigation

Closing arguments at the Trump Organization’s criminal tax fraud trial got off to a rocky start Thursday as a lawyer for the company was caught showing jurors portions of witness testimony that had previously been stricken from the official court record.

The tax fraud case is the only trial to arise from the Manhattan district attorney’s three-year investigation of Trump and his business practices.

The Trump Organization’s longtime finance chief, Allen Weisselberg, has admitted that he came up with the long-running scheme on his own, that he did so to save money on his own personal income taxes, and that neither Trump nor Trump’s family knew what he was doing.

Prior to the interruption, Necheles was using excerpts from Weisselberg’s three days of testimony to underscore her argument that the executive was only intending to benefit himself, not the Trump Organization, and that the company shouldn’t be blamed for his transgressions.

The Associated Press2 December 2022 05:00

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Sixers vs. Bucks: After Tyrese Maxey suffers left foot injury, Joel Embiid leads Sixers to win

The Sixers lost Tyrese Maxey to injury but beat the Bucks on Friday night to move above .500 (8-7) for the first time this season.

After posting 24 points on 9-for-12 shooting and five assists, Maxey was ruled out at halftime with a left foot injury, per a Sixers official. (More on Maxey below.) 

The Sixers still pulled out a gutsy, 110-102 win at Wells Fargo Center. Joel Embiid led them with 32 points, 11 rebounds and eight assists. 

Tobias Harris (left hip soreness), James Harden (right foot tendon strain), Furkan Korkmaz (left knee effusion) and Jaden Springer (right quadriceps strain) were all out. 

Milwaukee was down Khris Middleton, Wesley Matthews, Pat Connaughton and Joe Ingles. 

The Sixers will finish their back-to-back Saturday night in Philadelphia against the Timberwolves. Here are observations on their victory over the Bucks:

Embiid, Antetokounmpo bring their best early 

With the Sixers playing after a four-day stretch between games, it wouldn’t have been surprising if Embiid took a while to rediscover the rhythm and brilliance of his 59-point performance Sunday. Fortunately for the Sixers, he looked exactly the same out of the gates. 

Antetokounmpo also had a very strong start, driving in for an emphatic dunk and putting the Bucks up 7-2 with a pull-up jumper. As for Embiid, the Sixers emphasized early touches against Brook Lopez in the middle of the floor. While Lopez guarded Embiid well when the Sixers lost in their home opener to Milwaukee, so much of Embiid’s success always seems to hinge on whether he makes comfortable shots.

 

On Friday, he recorded the Sixers’ first seven points, knotting the game at 7-all with a top-of-the-key three-pointer. He finally got a bit of scoring support from Maxey, whose wing three capped an 8-0 run. 

Embiid also kept the defensive highlights rolling in the first quarter. After Antetokounmpo found an angle to drive left on P.J. Tucker, Embiid shifted over to reject him at the rim. The Sixers capitalized with a Maxey layup in transition. Antetokounmpo is tremendous at placing constant pressure on the opposition and ripping away any potential momentum, though. He pulled up for a long-range jumper and sunk it, giving the Bucks a 15-12 edge.  

Ultimately, Antetokounmpo and Milwaukee managed to seize a 13-point advantage late in the first. Some of that boiled down to Embiid and Antetokounmpo’s respective production, but the Sixers’ initial struggles with the Greek Freak on the bench stood out. Sixers head coach Doc Rivers used a lineup with Embiid surrounded by Shake Milton, De’Anthony Melton, Matisse Thybulle and Georges Niang. Former Sixer George Hill made a three over Milton, who was called for traveling on the Sixers’ ensuing possession.

The Bucks began 12 for 18 from the floor and 5 for 9 from long distance, meaning the Sixers had to play from behind for their second straight meeting with Milwaukee. 

Milton (15 points, six assists) had another rough stretch with Embiid sitting early in the second period. After Hill stole the ball from him in the open floor, Milton dropped his head and the Bucks pounced on the fast-break chance, getting a Jrue Holiday layup to go ahead 39-28.

Harden’s absence has placed a spotlight on several of the Sixers’ weaker areas, and the team’s second-unit guard play has often been a concern the past couple of weeks. Maxey’s injury now puts even further pressure on Milton and Melton. Korkmaz did a light workout following the Sixers’ shootaround Friday morning and called himself “day-to-day.” 

Maxey hurt at end of tremendous half 

The Sixers’ defense had been a strength lately, but that certainly didn’t carry over into the first half. 

Their starting lineup was a solid defensive group on paper; Danuel House Jr. and Melton played alongside Embiid, Maxey and Tucker. However, the Bucks’ size and rebounding posed predictable issues. The 6-foot-11 Bobby Portis had two second-chance layups within the first six minutes. 

Tucker picked up his second foul on a moving screen with 1:26 left in the first quarter, though Rivers kept him in the game. While the Sixers didn’t string together many stops with Embiid out, Maxey did an excellent job confidently creating offense and scoring at all three levels. He made an impressive step-back jump shot over Antetokounmpo in the corner and reached 23 points late in the second on an open, after-timeout triple. When he’s aggressive and clear in his role, points tend to pile up fast for the 22-year-old. 

 

Maxey’s game concluded abruptly. He was fouled on a drive with 1:36 to go in the second quarter and came up limping. Though he tried to walk it off, taking a couple of steps into the crowd, it was immediately obvious that his pain wasn’t going to disappear. Maxey split his two free throws before subbing out.

ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski reported that X-rays were negative on Maxey’s foot and he’ll have an MRI on Saturday.

Despite Maxey’s fantastic play, the Sixers trailed by seven points at halftime in large part due to their sloppiness. There’s nothing wrong with a few turnovers related to pushing the pace, but the Sixers gave the ball away carelessly several times in the final few minutes before intermission. Melton committed one of the team’s 11 first-half giveaways on a long, ill-advised pass intended for House. 

Of course, once Maxey was ruled out, his status loomed as a matter larger than the game’s result. The Sixers know they can survive with an extremely Embiid-centric style of play, but they’d obviously prefer not to play without their starting backcourt for an extended stretch. 

Finding an (unusual) way down stretch

The Sixers started the third quarter well without Maxey and took a 69-67 lead on an Embiid mid-range jumper. 

The minutes when Embiid sat were more adventurous than ever; Rivers used Paul Reed-Embiid lineups in both the second and third quarters. With 2:37 left in the third, he went to a Reed-Montrezl Harrell frontcourt and asked Reed to guard Antetokounmpo. That decision yielded great results at first when Reed stopped the two-time MVP in isolation and pulled down the defensive board. Georges Niang (17 points) eventually drained a three-pointer to give the Sixers an 84-77 lead. A Milton runner and a buzzer-beating House jumper were other important baskets during that unconventional Embiid-less stint. 

The tricky calls on Rivers’ plate increased with Embiid out. He understandably removed Thybulle about a minute and a half after Reed entered in the third quarter; that’s not a duo that will generally be conducive to efficient offense. Thybulle, who missed the Sixers’ last two practices with an ankle injury, only received four minutes. 

Following a couple of Tucker-Harrell frontcourt minutes early in the fourth, the Sixers were up 92-90 and subbed Embiid back into the game. Antetokounmpo’s woes at the foul line were quite helpful in the Sixers having a lead at that stage. He went 4 for 15 in the game and the home crowd loved every miss (as well as the escalating “Bricken for Chicken” rewards).

Compared to Sunday night’s win over the Jazz, the Sixers’ supporting cast did a much better job of chipping in offense around Embiid in the fourth quarter.

On a key sequence, Melton skied for a defensive rebound and then threw the ball ahead to Milton. With Embiid noticeably wiped out, he didn’t cross half court until about 15 seconds remained on the shot clock. He swung the ball to Niang, who drove past Portis and made an and-one layup. Next time down, Embiid assisted a big corner three by Melton and the Sixers grabbed a 102-99 lead.

 

Embiid’s mid-range game is always a nice option down the stretch, too. He buried back-to-back jumpers to extend the Sixers’ lead to seven points. Then, with Milwaukee determined to make someone else beat them, he declined dribbling into a pull-up jumper and instead found Milton for a wide-open layup.

If there was any doubt that he’d turned in another MVP-level performance, Embiid nailed another jumper over Lopez.

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Stock futures rise after Wall Street suffers first decline in three sessions

Stock futures were higher Tuesday morning after ending the day lower, snapping a two-day advance that started when a better-than-expected inflation report stoked hopes that the Federal Reserve would soon ease up on raising interest rates.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 117 points, or 0.35%. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq-100 futures gained 0.46% and 0.71%, respectively. Taiwan Semiconductor, Louisiana-Pacific and Paramount jumped after regulatory filings showed that Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway had bought new positions in the first two, and raised its stake in the last.

Investors also watched for filings to see what major investors Michael Burry, Bill Ackman, David Tepper and others bought or sold through the third quarter.

Stocks whiplashed during the day Monday on comments from Federal Reserve leaders Lael Brainard and Chris Waller about rate hikes going forward. While Brainard said the central bank could ease off rate increases, Waller said the market was overly optimistic and should brace for higher rates.

“After last week’s CPI undershoot prompted a huge equity rally & reversal in the Dollar, the critical topic for markets this week will be the Fed’s reaction,” wrote Huw Roberts, head of analytics at Quant Insight, in a Monday note.

He added that the degree to which speakers this week push back or endorse the market’s recent moves “will be critical.”

Stocks slipped later on a report that Amazon will lay off about 10,000 employees, potentially starting this week.

Markets will get more inflation information on Tuesday when the producer price index, a measure of wholesale inflation, is released. Investors will also study comments from Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker, Fed Governor Lisa Cook and Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr.

Earnings season continues this week with retail reports on deck. Walmart and Home Depot release results Wednesday while Target, Lowe’s, Bath and Body Works, Macy’s, Kohl’s and Foot Locker report later in the week.

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