FOX NEWS:- Senior Trump aide apologizes after promoting video of chainsaw-wielding man yelling racial slur


Senior Trump aide apologizes after promoting video of chainsaw-wielding man yelling racial slur



One of President Trump's senior campaign advisers has apologized after promoting a tweet praising a chainsaw-wielding man who used a racial slur while admonishing protests.

via FOX NEWS https://foxnews.com/politics/schlapp-apology-video-chainsaw-racial-slur

FOX NEWS:- Former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis denounces President Trump for dividing Americans


Former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis denounces President Trump for dividing Americans



Journal Editorial Report Host Paul Gigot and Wall Street Journal Columnist Dan Henninger weigh in on 'America's News HQ.'

via FOX NEWS http://video.foxnews.com/v/6162154129001

FOX NEWS:- Pompeo hits back against China's 'obscene propaganda' following George Floyd's death


Pompeo hits back against China's 'obscene propaganda' following George Floyd's death



Secretary of State Mike Pompeo Saturday blasted the Chinese Communist Party’s "obscene propaganda" in the wake of George Floyd's killing and accused the Chinese government of a "callous exploitation" of Floyd's death.

via FOX NEWS https://foxnews.com/politics/pompeo-hits-back-against-chinas-obscene-propaganda-following-george-floyds-death

New on Sports Illustrated: Former Browns Coach Hue Jackson Says He Wanted to Sign Colin Kaepernick in 2017


Former Browns coach Hue Jackson said he wanted to sign quarterback Colin Kaepernick in 2017, the season following his kneeling protests against police brutality and racial injustice.

Former Cleveland Browns coach Hue Jackson said he wanted to sign quarterback Colin Kaepernick ahead of the 2017 season. 

In an interview with "The Really Big Show" on WKNR AM-850, Jackson described how he wanted to bring Kaepernick to Cleveland following the Browns' 1-15 season in 2016. Instead, the franchise selected quarterback DeShone Kizer in the second round of the 2017 draft and went on to finish with an 0-16 record the following season. 

"I wanted him," Jackson said. "It just didn’t work out. Obviously, those things do have to work from a finance, draft, whatever all that is. And that wasn’t my decision." 

Kaepernick has not played in the NFL since the 2016 season, when he first kneeled during the national anthem to protest police brutality and racial injustice in America. He was selected in the second round of the 2011 NFL draft by the San Francisco 49ers and spent six years with the team before opting out of his contract and becoming a free agent. 

In the interview, Jackson went on to say that he wanted to draft Kaepernick when he was coach of the Raiders in 2011. In addition, Jackson said he always thought Kaepernick "deserved an opportunity" in the NFL.

"He had tremendous success," Jackson said. "He is a guy who has stood for something. I think everybody is seeing exactly where he was coming from … I always thought Colin deserved an opportunity in this league, but he has to want to play. If he really wanted to play, I think he would have a chance again." 

Jackson was fired during Cleveland's 2018 season and finished with a 3-36-1 record as head coach of the Browns. 

Kaepernick's actions from 2016 have been brought to light once again after George Floyd, an unarmed 46-year-old Black man, was killed under police custody in Minneapolis, Minn. on May 25. Since then, peaceful protests have formed across the country related to police brutality and racial injustice.

On Friday, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said the league was wrong for "not listening to NFL players earlier" on racism and systematic oppression and encouraged all to "speak out and peacefully protest." The message was in response to a video from many NFL stars that called for the league to revise its initial statement


June 07, 2020 at 06:27AM
Former Browns Coach Hue Jackson Says He Wanted to Sign Colin Kaepernick in 2017

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British Airways threatens to fire pilots, fights UK quarantine rule

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Blowout scores exposing those who didn't work hard during shutdown: Maguire

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New on Sports Illustrated: A's Owner John Fisher: Team Will Change Course, Pay Minor Leaguers; 'I Made a Mistake'


Oakland Athletics owner John Fisher said the organization would pay its minor league players after discontinuing its stipend payments at the end of May.

Less than two weeks after announcing the Oakland Athletics would not pay their minor league players beyond May 31, team owner John Fisher changed course on Friday. Fisher has committed to paying the organization's minor league players their $400 weekly stipends through what would have been the end of the minor league season, according to Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle.

“I changed my mind after spending a lot of time talking to our team,” Fisher said to the Chronicle. “I concluded I’d made a mistake.”

The players will be paid retroactively for the first week of June. Fisher is worth $2.2 billion, according to Forbes.

A's minor league players were informed they wouldn't be receiving their stipends in an email from general manager David Frost obtained by Sports Illustrated.

“Unfortunately, considering all of the circumstances affecting the organization at this time, we have decided not to continue your $400 weekly stipend beyond May 31,” read the email, sent by GM David Forst. “This was a difficult decision and it’s one that comes at a time when a number of our full-time employees are also finding themselves either furloughed or facing a reduction in salary for the remainder of the season. For all of this, I am sorry.”

The A's joined a long list of clubs that released or discontinued stipend payments for minor league players last week, which was met by significant criticism.

“I’ve listened to our fans and others, and there is no question that this is the right thing to do,” Fisher said to the Chronicle. “We clearly got this decision wrong. These players represent our future and we will immediately begin paying our minor-league players. I take responsibility and I’m making it right.”

Slusser reports that team executives cautioned how the decision to halt payments of minor-league stipends would impact the club's chances of signing free-agent minor-league players after next week's draft. The 2020 draft will consist of five rounds, and teams are permitted to sign an unlimited number of players as free agents for bonuses of $20,000 or less.

“Certainly we want to go into that with people feeling as positively about playing for the A’s as possible,” Fisher told the Chronicle, emphasizing the decision to revive stipend payments was centered on fairness toward the organization's minor league players.


June 06, 2020 at 06:02AM
A's Owner John Fisher: Team Will Change Course, Pay Minor Leaguers; 'I Made a Mistake'

New on Sports Illustrated: No title



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BBC NEWS - Week in pictures: 30 May - 5 June 2020

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BBC NEWS - On patrol with Kenya's locust hunters

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BBC NEWS : The 'unscrupulous' firms targeting key workers

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New on Sports Illustrated: UFC 250: Nunes vs Spencer MMA Betting Preview


SI's UFC Betting & Fantasy Analyst Casey Olson goes through his predictions and best bets for UFC 250; featuring Amanda Nunes vs. Felicia Spencer in the main event.

The UFC heads back to Las Vegas this weekend for UFC 250: Nunes vs Spencer. Amanda Nunes (19-4-0), the women’s pound-for-pound best fighter, looks to defend her featherweight title against former Invicta Fighting champion Felicia Spencer (8-1-0). Nunes enters the match as a a massive favorite at -525.

Since joining the UFC, in about a year’s time, Spencer has established herself as a game challenger, winning twice via finish, and making a name for herself as she took everything Cyborg Santos could throw at her before eventually dropping a decision. Can Spencer shock the world Saturday night by taking down the champ? We’ll find out soon.

Co-headlining the event will be two of the bantamweight’s best, as No. 9 Cody Garbrandt (11-3-0) makes his long awaited return after a year away against No. 5 Raphael Assuncao (27-7-0). Assuncao, a perpetual contender, looks to get back on track after losing a unanimous decision to Cory Sandhagen last August. Garbrandt is heavily focused and motivated to get back to title conversations after losing his last three fights via KO; ending his streak of 11 straight victories to start his professional career.

The entire card will be filled with action, as the UFC continues its use of the smaller, 25’ octagon at the APEX, instead of the standard 30’ cage. The use of the smaller octagon has historically increased fight finish rates, and shortened average fight times. This is due to the ability to create more action and engagement between the two fighters.

The card gets underway at 6pm ET and is scheduled for 12 matches in total. The matches which will air live on ESPN and work its way to Pay-per-view for the main card.

TIME: SATURDAY 06/06/2020

BROADCAST: PAY PER VIEW – PRELIMS: ESPN

VENUE: UFC APEX

LOCATION: Las Vegas, Nevada

MATCHES: 12

UFC 250 MAIN CARD

WOMEN’S FEATHERWEIGHT TITLE BOUT 145 LBS

(C) AMANDA NUNES 19-4 VS FELICIA SPENCER 8-1

BANTAMWEIGHT BOUT 135 LBS

#5 RAPHAEL ASSUNCAO 27-7 VS #9 CODY GARBRANDT 11-3

BANTAMWEIGHT BOUT 135 LBS

#2 ALJAMAIN STERLING 18-3 VS #4 CORY SANDHAGEN 12-1

WELTERWEIGHT BOUT 170 LBS

NEIL MAGNY 22-7 VS ANTHONY ROCCO MARTIN 17-5

BANTAMWEIGHT BOUT 135 LBS

EDDIE WINELAND 24-13-1 VS SEAN O’MALLEY 11-0

PRELIMS:

FEATHERWEIGHT BOUT 145 LBS

ALEX CACERES 15-12 VS CHASE HOOPER 9-0-1

MIDDLEWEIGHT BOUT 185 LBS

#13 IAN HEINISCH 13-3 VS GERALD MEERSCHAERT 31-12

FEATHERWEIGHT BOUT 145 LBS

#12 CODY STAMANN 18-2-1 VS BRIAN KELLEHER 21-10

MIDDLEWEIGHT BOUT 185 LBS

CHARLES BYRD 10-6 VS MAKI PITOLO 12-5

FLYWEIGHT BOUT 125 LBS

#4 JUSSIER FORMIGA 23-7 VS #9 ALEX PEREZ 23-5

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT BOUT 205 LBS

ALONZO MENIFIELD 9-0 VS DEVIN CLARK 11-4

CATCHWEIGHT BOUT 150 LBS

EVAN DUNHAM 18-8-1 VS HERBERT BURNS 10-2

Felicia Spencer gets her crack at gold vs Women's MMA Goat Amanda Nunes

In the night’s main event, women’s featherweight champ, Amanda Nunes (19-4) will look to defend her title against former Invicta FC’s champion Felicia Spencer (8-1).

Nunes is riding a 10-fight win streak, and has remarkably defeated every woman who has held the UFC’s bantamweight and featherweight titles. It’s tough to not call her the greatest women’s MMA fighter after viewing her resume. Her last defeat came in 2014, when Cat Zingano was able to stop her late in the fight via elbows and punches. Since that defeat, Nunes has cruised through the “who’s who” in females fighting, and along the way became both the Women’s Bantamweight and Featherweight champion. She has finished seven of her last 10 fights inside the distance, including five KO/TKOs and two submissions.

The fight which many consider the event that put her as the pound-for-pound best, was her 51-second knockout against Cyborg Santos, a common opponent between her and Saturday’s foe Felicia Spencer. Although Spencer lost to Cyborg via decision, many consider her ability to take the thrashing that she did and still come forward to make the final bell a moral victory in a sense.

Following that loss, which was first in her professional career, Spencer got right back on track and finished Zarah Fairn dos Santos in less than a round. With a division carrying less than 10 active fighters, Spencer’s the rightful next contender for the belt. However, on paper, this is the equivalent of a college football team stepping up to compete against an NFL squad. Spencer has a substantial skillset (BJJ - black belt, Tae Kwon Do - black belt), proven durability, and is hungry to shock the world. But to be able to dethrone the champ, it's going to take a very special performance from her on Saturday night.

Nunes’ only weakness, which we’ve seen well in the past, has been her occasional suspect cardio. In her last fight she went five rounds with no issues, but with the pandemic and inability to train consistently, and her partner Nina Ansaroff pregnant with their first child, I wonder if we will see Spencer impress more than expected. All things considered, this is a sizable mismatch. If Spencer can get it done, it will be comparable to Matt Serra defeating Georges St. Pierre back in 2007, considering the upset of the decade.

PREDICTION: AMANDA NUNES

Can vet Eddie Wineland put the breaks on the rise of the Suga Show?

Kicking off the pay-per-view Saturday night, the first match on the main card features uber-popular, 25-year-old Sean O’Malley (11-0) taking on the inaugural WEC bantamweight champ Eddie Wineland (24-13-1).

Wineland, a full-time firefighter had been training to take on Marlon Vera back in March, had his match scrapped due to the pandemic, putting his return to the Octagon temporarily on hold until this rebooking with O’Malley for UFC 250.

O’Malley, currently ranked just outside of the top 15, is calling for a title fight by the end of 2021. After a couple key wins, he’ll look to validate the hype and should do so if he impresses against the veteran. Wineland is versed, intelligent and won’t go away quickly in this matchup. He understands he is positioned as a possible name to continue the rise of the new generation of fighters, one being O’Malley.

As O’Malley is the rightful favorite, I see a position where he can survive and get this into the “over” on rounds set at 1.5.

Wineland will have several disadvantages on the feet, where O’Malley will have the height and reach advantage, coupled with the fact that O’Malley carries a +3.04 strike differential, and will control the octagon the majority of the fight.

I suspect the large duration of the fight will be on the feet, as the 38 fight veteran Wineland, brings to the table an 86% takedown defense and prefers getting into striking wars himself.

The fight could turn into something similar to what we saw when O’Malley faced Soukhamthath, eventually winning via decision and completed his post fight interview on his back, not being able to walk after taking massive damage via legkicks.

Though Wineland hasn’t been overly active over the last 10 years or so, he’s respectfully balanced fighting with his firefighting gig, taking 17 fights over the last decade. In that time, he’s only lost twice in less than 7.5 minutes.

The smaller cage is in action yet again this week, but Wineland’s no stranger here.

PREDICTION: WINELAND/O’MALLEY OVER 1.5 ROUNDS -125

Chase Hooper locked in as my favorite play of the night.

Alex Caceres is in for a tough test Saturday as the 15-12 vet takes on 20-year old rising star Chase Hooper (9-0-1). The match will be a part of the headliner fight on the ESPN preliminary broadcast.

When I saw Hooper open at -120 I jumped all over it. With only one fight so far in the UFC, we haven’t had a chance to see much of what Hooper can offer at the sport’s top tier. But we have seen enough of his strengths, along with Caceres’ weaknesses, which make for a stylistic advantage for the kid.

Caceres has been submitted seven times in his career and not helping the cause will be a small cage and a submission artist standing across from him. Last week we recommended Mackenzie Dern via Submission which came through with ease, and this could come through as a re-run. While the rising Hooper is undefeated in his first 10 fights as a pro, Caceres is 5-7 in his last 12, and in a rare case, enters as the fighter lacking both size and reach in the matchup. Hooper stays undefeated and celebrates with some M&Ms and quite possibly a $50K bonus by night’s end.

PREDICTION: CHASE HOOPER -120

Cody Stamann Gets the Job Done Honoring Death of his Brother

Even before news broke just about a week ago where Cody Stamann’s 18-year-old brother Jacob suddenly passed away, we sided with the favorite to win decisively against Brian Kelleher, another winner from just three short weeks ago.

I’m big on a fighter’s mentality heading into a fight, and something like this typically would pull me off the fight. But when I saw Stamann’s motivation to honor his late brother Saturday, along with the added fuel to the fire to get the job done, I’m sticking with the -285 favorite. With the elevated line, I will wager via decision at -137.

Stamann is a well rounded fighter, former NCAA Division II wrestler, and BJJ blue belt to boot. He should be able to get Kelleher to the mat and control. While on the feet, he should continue to expose Kelleher’s unfortunate ability to get hit, as he absorbs 6.02 strikes per minute, nearly double that of Stamann.

Stamann’s last five wins all came via decision against a tough schedule of respectable opponents. On the flip side, Kelleher has only heard the final bell once in his last 10 fights, where he won via finish on six occasions. I just don’t see him finishing Stamann, and even though Kelleher has only gone to decision in 22% of his fights, adding risk to this prop bet, I’ll take a shot.

PREDICTION: CODY STAMANN VIA DEC -137

QUICK PREDICTIONS ON THE MATCHUPS:

(C) AMANDA NUNES defeats FELICIA SPENCER

  • Nunes 10-fight winning streak.
  • Nunes 80% takedown defense.
  • Spencer has never been finished.
  • Spencer has only gone into the championship rounds once.

#5 RAPHAEL ASSUNCAO defeats #9 CODY GARBRANDT

  • Garbrandt is back after a year layoff, after losing three straight via KO.
  • Assuncao leads on large majority of both striking and grappling statistics.
  • Garbrandt has 100% takedown defense.
  • While mma math is not a thing, I’ll still note Garbrandt has been KO’d by both TJ Dillashaw and Pedro Munhoz, while Assuncao has beat them both.

#2 ALJAMAIN STERLING defeats #4 CORY SANDHAGEN

  • Sterling hasn’t lost a round in his last four fights.
  • Sandhagen has never been finished.
  • Sandhagen is on a 7-fight winning streak.
  • Sandhagen has been taken down by his opponent in all five of his UFC fights.

NEIL MAGNY defeats ANTHONY ROCCO MARTIN

  • Magny will have a 6.5 inch reach advantage.
  • Magny was a main training partner for Justin Gaethje in his title winning camp.
  • Martin has not landed a takedown in his last seven fights.

SEAN O’MALLEY 11-0 defeats EDDIE WINELAND 24-13-1

  • O’Malley is 10 years younger, and will have size advantage across the board.
  • O’Malley is undefeated in 11 fights, with seven finishes in the first round.
  • Seven of Winelands last eight victories have come by way of knockout.

CHASE HOOPER 9-0-1 defeats ALEX CACERES 15-12

  • Almost 60% of Caceres’ losses have come by way of submission.
  • Hooper has a +3.27 strike differential, and lands 5.16 per minute.
  • Caceres is 2-2 against southpaws.
  • Caceres is 5-7 in his last 12 matches.

#13 IAN HEINISCH defeats GERALD MEERSCHAERT

  • Heinisch leads across the board in all striking stats.
  • Heinisch has only been submitted once, which happens to be Meerschaert’s strength.
  • Meerschaert has a considerable experience edge, with 27 more professional fights.

#12 CODY STAMANN defeats BRIAN KELLEHER

  • Kelleher with a quick turnaround, after winning via KO on May 13th.
  • Stamann’s last five victories have come by way of decision.
  • Kelleher absorbs 6.02 significant strikes per minute.
  • Stamann has never been finished by strikes.

CHARLES BYRD defeats MAKI PITOLO

  • Byrd leads in all grappling stats.
  • Pitolo’s return fight to 185 lbs.
  • 70% of Byrd’s wins have come in the first round.

#4 JUSSIER FORMIGA defeats ALEX PEREZ

  • Formiga is coming off of back to back losses for the first time in his career.
  • Three of Perez’s last four fights have ended in the first round.
  • Formiga has faced a higher tier of opponents in comparison to Perez.
  • Formiga has outstanding grappling, and is a BJJ and Judo Black belt.
  • Formiga hasn’t been taken down in his last eight fights, dating back to 2015.

ALONZO MENIFIELD defeats DEVIN CLARK

  • Menifield is undefeated in nine fights, and have never gone to the decision.
  • Clark on the other hand, has gone to the final bell in his last five victories.
  • Menifield is very explosive, and his career average fight time is 3:24.

EVAN DUNHAM defeats HERBERT BURNS

  • Burns leads in all grappling stats, though Dunham has an 80% takedown defense.
  • Burns has never been finished, and Dunham’s last five wins have come by decision.
  • Dunham with a considerable experience edge.

Last event prediction recap: 8-3

Fight card predictions overall: 167-89-6 (65%)

Targeted matchups (wagers): 61-24-2 (72%) Avg. odds -107

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June 06, 2020 at 05:03AM
UFC 250: Nunes vs Spencer MMA Betting Preview

New on Sports Illustrated: Roger Goodell Responds to Players' Video: 'We, the NFL, Believe Black Lives Matter'


Roger Goodell responded to a video released by NFL players on Thursday that called on the league to issue a revised statement on the issue of systemic racism.

On Friday evening, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell responded to a video released by players calling on the league to issue a revised statement on the issue of systemic racism and police brutality. 

"We, the NFL, condemn racism and the systematic oppression of Black People," Goodell said in the video. "We, the NFL, admit we were wrong for not listening to NFL players earlier and encourage all to speak out and peacefully protest. We, the NFL, believe Black Lives Matter."

Goodell additionally said that he wants to "be part of the much-needed change" in the United States, adding that he plans on reaching out to players who have voiced their opinions on the situation. 

On Thursday, the 71-second video, which features Patrick Mahomes, Odell Beckham Jr., Saquon Barkley, Tyrann Mathieu and Deshaun Watson, among others, called on the league to revise their initial statement.

The league released an initial statement last Saturday that was credited to Goodell. It said, in part, "The NFL family is greatly saddened by the tragic events across our country. The protesters' reactions to these incidents reflect the pain, anger and frustration that so many of us feel.

"As current events dramatically underscore, there remains much more to do as a country and as a league. These tragedies inform the NFL's commitment and our ongoing efforts. There remains an urgent need for action. We recognize the power of our platform in communities and as part of the fabric of American society. We embrace that responsibility and are committed to continuing the important work to address these systemic issues together with our players, clubs and partners."

However, players such as Eric Reid and Kenny Stills were among those who criticized the league's initial remarks. 

The NFL's comments come amid ongoing protests in the United States related to police brutality and racial injustice. The protests were sparked by the death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man who was killed in Minneapolis last week after being violently apprehended by police.

Four Minneapolis police officers were fired last week after a viral video showed one of them kneeling on the neck of Floyd, who cried that he could not breathe.

Last Friday, Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, who was was seen on video kneeling on Floyd's neck, was fired and then arrested on charges of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. On Wednesday, the murder charge against Chauvin was elevated to second-degree murder.

It was also announced Wednesday that former officers Tou Thao, Thomas Lane and J. Alexander Kueng are facing charges of aiding and abetting murder.


June 06, 2020 at 04:49AM
Roger Goodell Responds to Players' Video: 'We, the NFL, Believe Black Lives Matter'

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New on Sports Illustrated: Black Hockey Roundtable: Talking Racism Inside and Outside the Sport


A number of prominent black personalities in hockey were kind enough to share their thoughts regarding racism inside and outside the sport:

It’s time to hear out black voices on the racism afflicting the world. That means getting the word out – with the black community doing the talking.

A number of prominent black personalities in hockey were kind enough to share their thoughts this week regarding racism inside and outside the sport:

– David Amber, Hockey Night in Canada studio host

– Blake Bolden, PWHPA defenseman & the NHL’s first black female pro scout

– Grant Fuhr, Hall of Fame goaltender

– Kwame Mason, director of the documentary Soul on Ice and co-curator of the NHL’s Black Hockey History Tour

Sarah Nurse, PWHPA forward

Here’s what they had to say.

How are you doing right now, emotionally? Are you hurting from seeing all the police violence, inspired by all the people coming together in protests, or a bit of both?

DAVID AMBER: It’s been a heavy two weeks. When the video came out of George Floyd, I watched the whole thing. I’m not sure if I should have, but I did. I felt compelled to watch what happened. And it was sickening. I just couldn’t believe the lack of humanity. Add another name to the long list of people who haven’t been treated properly and fairly and the racial inequality and injustice we continue to see.

There was a deep sadness that set in. Later, I did feel good that it seems, this time, maybe there will be a movement for proper change. We need law enforcement reform, we need a judicial reform, and it really seems like this situation might be the tipping point. I don’t want to get overly hopeful, as it’s been 29 years since Rodney King’s beating was captured on tape. There were protests, and there was shock, but it didn’t really effect too much change. I was hopeful back then, thinking, “Wow, it’s been exposed, we need to make some significant changes to how we’re doing things,” and it just sort of went away.

And I’m hoping this is different. It feels like this could be a seminal moment that could help shape the future. There are a lot of people expressing their sadness and what this means to them, and it’s opened some eyes. People, I think, are ready now. A lot of white people, too, it’s opened their eyes, and they want to listen, they want to help heal, they want to move together. I’ve said repeatedly, it’s not a black or white issue – it’s a right or wrong issue. There’s a lot of people on the side of right who are pushing right now and not going to allow this to just go away. So I’m hopeful for that.

SARAH NURSE: The past couple of weeks definitely have been very difficult and tiring. The protests and everything going on…it’s a lot, a lot to decipher and go through. The police brutality we’ve seen with George Floyd and Breonna Taylor has been really devastating. It’s highlighted a lot of things. I’m not going to go into the whole good cop versus bad cop, because I’m not into generalizing a whole population or group of people, but there are things that need to be said. There are stands that definitely need to be made. With COVID going on, people are going out and protesting and risking their health and safety because they believe they need to take a stand and that justice needs to be served.

BLAKE BOLDEN: There is sadness and frustration and, I guess, relief that people are starting to wake up – unfortunately under the passing of an individual. But it’s important that, as I was speaking to one of my former teammates, for the first time I felt comfortable talking about these issues. I had always tried to carry myself with respect and be that role model, not necessarily talking about racism but being a pillar of race within the sport. This situation has come to everyone’s doorstep, and now it’s something we can’t ignore or say isn’t a thing. Because clearly, and as I’ve known and experienced, it is still prevalent, and we need to do our part in being anti-racist and informing ourselves and educating ourselves so that we shut this down.

GRANT FUHR: It’s disappointing to see everything that’s going on. But at the same time, it’s been a powder keg that’s been there for years, and that’s the unfortunate part. If you look at the big picture, it took a bad person to trigger it all. Society right now, there’s so much hate in it that it was only a matter of time before somebody set a match to it. I don’t call him a police officer. I call him a murderer in a police officer’s uniform. He set off the powder keg.

But I’ve always been a glass-half-full guy, and what I see is…the black community is a very strong community, and yes, it’s been slighted for a long time, but at the same time there are a lot of people who support it. There’s a lot of different races that support it and understand what’s going on. And that’s the good side. That’s the positive side of it. The really bad side of it is the rioters and anarchists that have hijacked a great opportunity for social change.

KWAME MASON: To be honest with you, in this moment right now, as we’re speaking, I’m nervous. It’s a scared nervous, like the feeling I’d get as a kid when I knew I was in trouble or something, and it just wasn’t going to be a happy night or happy day, and it was just going to be tense. I feel really nervous for the world and where we go from here and how this plays out. I’m just nervous for the families, and a lot stems from the fact I’ve got a two-and-a-half-year-old who is going to have to grow up in this world.

And I remember just a couple days ago, I started flashing back to when I was old enough to go on my own to parties, coming back and still living at home. I’ve got that freedom, I’m a young man, I’m going to go to the club or to this event or I’ve got to do this performance or whatever it may be. I would go out, and I would come home at 2:30, 3:00 in the morning, and my mom would just call out my name, and I’d be like, “Why are you still up? Go to sleep! We’re good!” She’d say, “I can’t sleep until I know you’re home. And she and I would argue about that, because I thought at that time, “This is dumb. Just go to sleep. I’m fine. I can take care of myself.”

And now, I’m thinking the other day, “I’m not going to be able to sleep when my kid gets older.” With this quarantine, I’ve been staring at him, thinking, “Man, you’ve got to go through this?” I know I went through it. I’ve been thrown up against walls by police. I’m not trying to exaggerate. I can tell you situations where I was arrested. They put a charge of resisting arrest and assaulting police on me, and I had to go to court, and they had to throw the case out because there was nothing! But I had to be thrown up against a police car, I had to be put in jail, I had to get a lawyer and do the whole nine yards. When they realized, “Nah, we’ve got nothing on this guy,” they said “Case dismissed.”

And that was just me. I remember when I was a kid, I used to go to New York every summer to visit my cousin, and I remember one summer I went there, and my cousin’s face was f— up. He got the s— beaten out of him, and it was the cops in that neighborhood. It was disgusting. The police rolled through and got busy. And this was in the ’90s. If you think things are crazy now, imagine what it was back then! Imagine what it was in the ’70s and ’80s. Imagine what it was like when there were no cell phones.

So how do I feel right now? I feel nervous. But with every negative there’s a positive. I used to tell myself that all the time growing up, because I used to have a lot of bad days. And what would get me through those bad days is knowing there’s a good day tomorrow. And it’s corny, but you know what that little curly-haired redheaded girl said? The sun will come up tomorrow. And it’s true. It’s what I say to myself. In our world, there’s negative energy and positive energy, so with every piece of negative energy, there’s going to be a piece of positive energy. I have to believe that, because if I don’t, I’m going to lose my mind as a black man in this world. It’s not about countries and spaces and this or that territory. It’s about the world.

Be it inside or outside the hockey world, what are some hardships you’ve had to endure as a black person?

BLAKE BOLDEN: I played boys hockey, and a lot of girls that play professionally, a lot of my colleagues and teammates started out playing boys’ hockey. So I think a lot of them feel the weight of being different and put in this box. So not only was I the only girl, but I was the only black person on my team, and that was very difficult as a young girl. That’s when I started to hear and feel the wrath of parents and their children. It trickled down from their parents to the kids on the ice.

My mother would hear things in the stands. My father is white, not biological but he is my father – and he would hear things, but the parents wouldn’t know he was my dad. So I would overhear my parents talking about the things that were said about me, but they would never tell me these things because they wanted to protect me. “Who does that black girl think she is?” or using the N-word, or “This girl shouldn’t be out here.” Just ridiculous things, not only because of my race but because of my gender. So that was really hard growing up.

I’ve been called the N-word many times on the ice. I’m a defenseman, so protecting my goaltender was my priority, and when I would assert myself, words would be thrown. And I would shell up and wouldn’t really have a response, because there’s (no response) to have with that hatred. I don’t have hate in me, really, so I would just stay quiet. My teammates around me would rile up, and then I would snap back into like, “Whoa. That was an experience.”

That’s how it was for me. With my gradual incline within the sport and playing with women, I think we’re a lot more supportive of one another and a little bit more family oriented. There wasn’t as much racism that I heard. It was more microaggressions, and that was due to pure ignorance and not understanding that maybe it wasn’t the right thing to say. So it’s, “Should I say something? Should I shake up the locker room? Should I just be quiet?” There were all those things I had to navigate.

DAVID AMBER: I’ve been asked about that a fair bit. I’ve had a lot of people reaching out to me, friends, questioning, “Is it really that bad? Do these things happen?” And I say, yeah, they do happen. In 2018, a human rights commission outlined in Toronto, which I consider a great city, the place I grew up, a report on racial injustice in policing. And what it found was a black person in Toronto was 20 times more likely than a white person to be involved in a fatal police shooting. They were overrepresented in cases of excessive force and deadly encounters. This is a systemic problem, and I’ve had a few things, like being pulled over in my car for no reason. That’s happened a few times, where I’ve had to explain – “Where’s your registration and license?” – I hand it back to them – “So you own the car?” And I’m like, “I just handed you the registration and ownership, yes.” Those sorts of things have happened to me. It’s unfortunate.

I do think now is a good time to have the dialogue continued and opened and for people to really take note that this isn’t a one-off thing. George Floyd is not a standalone event. People need to realize that. Tamir Rice, Freddie Gray, Eric Garner, Walter Scott, Trayvon Martin, I can go on and on and on and on. It’s a continuing problem, a long line of social injustices. It’s a systemic issue.

SARAH NURSE: Growing up, playing hockey, I’ve always been questioned, and people haven’t understood why I play hockey. I’ve always been asked why I didn’t stick with basketball or track and field. I’ve had someone come up to me saying, “I will absolutely never understand why you play hockey.” I felt that, in the hockey community, I didn’t always belong, because I was a black hockey player and a black female hockey player, so a double minority. The sad thing is, unless you’re an elite player, unless you have exceptional talent, a lot of people don’t take black people playing hockey seriously, which is very sad. It’s not good enough that black kids love hockey and have a passion for it and want to play the sport. They have to be good at it or they’re not respected. And that’s sad.

In the last year in Canada, I’ve heard about racial slurs being thrown at different children, black children, indigenous children, and it breaks my heart that it’s happening to them, because people don’t always believe them. And I’m willing to put my life on the line when I say they’re not lying. Because people don’t pull out the race card unless it’s something serious. There need to be top-down things going on that are really going to change it and policies put into place to say, “We’re not going to stand for this. We’re not going to tolerate this in our hockey community.”

GRANT FUHR: I was fortunate in the beginning and sheltered from it playing in Canada, in Edmonton on a good hockey team. I didn’t really realize it until I got traded to Buffalo. All of a sudden you get banned from a golf club. I was out with a friend and ordered breakfast, and all of a sudden he can’t get served. It was an eye opener for me once I crossed into the United States. And after my suspension, I saw it even more. At the same time, you learn to deal with it and play on. We’re lucky enough to play a game for a living, and you can try to tune it out. Society, however, can’t tune it out. Society has to grow, and it hasn’t done that.

KWAME MASON: The hardest part was identifying myself on that ice and having nobody that made me feel like I could be a part of the game just as much as anyone else. Culturally, at that time, late ’70s, early ’80s, the stereotypes were so hard. My black friends would say, “It’s the white boys’ sport, I’m not playing that. I’m only doing it because we have to for gym class.” And then you flip it with my friends who were white, and it was, “Black people don’t like hockey because their ankles are too thin. You guys should just play basketball.” So I was in the middle of it, and I felt I had to pick a side, and I picked what my black friends were doing. When I played hockey at that time in my life, I hung out mostly with white kids. So BMX biking, my music of choice was heavy metal, my sport was hockey. But when I got into junior high school and discovered the black kids of my neighbourhood and started hanging with them, everything changed. I started listening to rap music. One thing I wish could’ve stayed in there was the game of hockey, but it became a guilty pleasure.

As the saying goes, with great power comes great responsibility. As a black person who is a public figure, is it a source of pride when people rely on you to speak out on important issues? Is it stressful to bear that weight?

DAVID AMBER: I would never characterize it as a burden. I take it as a privilege. I also take it as a responsibility. To be afforded a platform is a great thing when you can use that platform in a positive way. I’m one voice in many, many, many voices, but I do think I understand that people want to hear from people in the black community who have witnessed some of these things first hand, and they want to hear our perspective. I think that’s great. It’s going to take everyone pulling together in the same direction to effect proper change, but I do consider it a real privilege that I have the chance to have my voice heard and maybe shed some light on a very serious issue.

KWAME MASON: I handle it with the utmost pride and respect. With putting out my movie, it put me in the space where you have considered yourself an authority on this subject matter. So when something happens, people go out and talk to those who have spent the time researching and working through these situations. So if they didn’t come to me, I’d be offended. Because I spent three years of my life…I sold my condominium. I was broke. I didn’t know how I was going to pay my bills. I used to be a smoker, and I stopped because I couldn’t even buy a pack of cigarettes! And I did that because I believed the black face and the black voice in hockey needed to be heard. And nobody was talking about it. Nobody. When I put that out there, it opened up a door and a floodgate where people were like, “We can discuss this.” And I found so many allies in different mediums. Gary Bettman, CBC, Global. It opened a door.

So I take it with pride, but I understand I have a responsibility to not just go off the cuff. I have to be intelligent about that. Because words matter. And if I say the wrong thing, it could make a family say, “I’m not putting my kid in this game.” But if I say the right thing, it could make a family say, “You know what? I want to give this game a chance.” Because when I was growing up, there was no narrative for us, so I just did not give the game a chance. And I’m so glad people like Kevin Weekes and Anson Carter and Georges Laraque persevered through adversity and put themselves out there for us right now.

So when I hear people talking about, ‘Hockey Isn’t for Everyone.’ When I hear people blasting the National Hockey League, I get offended. You’re telling me hockey’s not for me? It gave me a second chance in life. I had nothing. If my film failed, I was screwed. Gary Bettman called me up and said, “Kwame, come help us out. We’re going to put on a screening. I’ve heard your story. I’m going to try and figure out a way you can make some money because you sacrificed all that.” Sometimes the game of hockey has not been kind to thousands of people of color, and I feel for them. But I’m here to tell them that I’m here to fight for you. I’m here to make sure that doesn’t happen again. So if I can do something positive to help make sure our younger generation of black and brown boys and girls, or indigenous or Asian or East Indian kids, want to play the game of hockey, I want to make sure my voice spreads so it can open up a safe space for these children. I just want them to just play, and just play together.

BLAKE BOLDEN: I don’t see myself as powerful. I am who I am, and just being myself, I can represent the masses, so that’s really my M.O. I don’t get a sense of pride at all from people asking me. I’m a shy person by nature, so I think it’s uncomfortable – but at the same time it’s necessary. There are responsibilities if there’s an issue and people are asking for education and a friend comes to me and says, “Hey, what are the things I can do?” On one hand it’s, “Have you tried to educate yourself, or are you just coming to me because I’m your black friend?” On the other hand it’s, “I know you’re a good person, and I care about you, and I want you to get all the knowledge and understanding of where our frustration as the black community comes from.”

SARAH NURSE: I’ve been really active through social media just trying to provide people with resources to educate themselves, because it’s not my job to educate you. But I shared a post on social media the other day about my experience and learning about white privilege and where we are and where we need to go. I shared that because I know my audience. I know I have a huge hockey-community audience that is not black, and what’s going on in the U.S. right now with George Floyd may not completely resonate with them. They may have separated themselves from that. I needed to highlight that these things, these microaggressions, these racial biases we have, they exist and they happen every single day. That was how I connected to my audience. I wanted them to see it from a different perspective.

From your perspective, what is the best way to fight for change right now? Is it protesting? Writing? Speaking? Social media? All of the above? Something else?

KWAME MASON: The solution is not burning down the house, because it takes away from everything we’re trying to do. It gives those who are opposed to change an excuse. What I want to do, what I’m hoping we all do, is listen to those who are hurting and have some empathy, and as far as actions go, it’s more than the lip service. It’s more than putting out a tweet or a post. It’s about doing something.

And your voice can be a piece of action. I saw Jonathan Toews’ Instagram post and Logan Couture’s tweets, and they were heavy. Those were words, but they said, “These boys have picked a side.” And that side is, “I’m going to listen, empathize and be part of the discussion.” And I can’t wait until the day I meet those guys, because I’m going to give them a hug and say, “Thank you for saying that.” Right now, a lot of players are getting blasted for not saying anything, and that, to me, is not the point. The point is not about who specifically needs to say anything. I always say, “I want you to speak out, but I want you to speak out because it’s in your heart. I want you to speak out because you’re sleeping, and at 3:30 a.m. you wake up and say, “This is bothering me. I’ve got to express myself and show people I understand.” That’s what I want, because that’s genuine.

And I think the peaceful protesting needs to continue to the point where we have these open discussions. We need to continue things like podcasts, but we need to not pretend things aren’t happening. We need to talk. We need to bring people on and say, “How are you doing?” We need to reach out to our brothers and sisters. If you know someone who’s black, you need to reach out to them and say, “How are you doing? What are you thinking about? You good? If you need to talk, talk to me.” That goes a long way, because it lets people know you feel for what they may be going through.

And if you don’t agree with the cause for George Floyd – just stay out of our way. Because we’re not talking to you, we’re not touching you, we’re not in your space, we’re not stopping you from having a livelihood. Just let us do our thing.

DAVID AMBER: Protesting is good to let people know we’re not going to sit there and be complicit in this. We’re not going to sit there idly and allow people to be marginalized. Protesting, though, has its limitations until people vote in people who are ready to enact change. That is your strongest voice. In a democracy, being able to vote is the most important thing – and to put the pressure on the people voted in to listen to their constituents. The protesting helps, because I think it really shows the level of care and anger and frustration. But until these social injustices are met, what have we accomplished? There are still three police officers who were complicit and involved in the murder of George Floyd, one on his back, one on his legs, one standing guard, essentially, looking very indifferent the whole time as a man pleaded for his life and did nothing. Until we hold everyone accountable, we’re not moving in the right direction. (update: the other officers have been charged as of Wednesday afternoon)

How do you get that direction? We’re going to need a reform. We need to change the system. The system is broken and needs to be fixed so that there’s in place an ability to police the police when they need to be, an ability for people to be met with equality, to lessen the distrust and frustration we see in the current system that clearly isn’t working. Protests are the first step, but what comes after protests is that we need to get in place a system where there can be proper reform, where there’s healing taking place because the system works for all of us, not just some of us.

SARAH NURSE: It’s a combination of everything. Some people are going to be comfortable protesting and going out and making that really public showing, but then there are other people who are not comfortable with that. So writing, doing podcasts, sharing on social media, those are huge pieces, because that’s ultimately how we consume information at this point. You don’t necessarily look to black public figures or black people to educate you, but to be provided resources and to do your own research and examine your belief systems, that’s how we really change. It’s also about, as a collective population, people putting pressure on people of power and the government, because that’s how we’re going to make change.

BLAKE BOLDEN: I think in our hockey space, the best solution is having these conversations, because I think we don’t have the conversations. And reading the experiences of other NHL players of color coming out saying, “Hey, this is the real thing, I’ve dealt with it, this is what was said to me, and this is how I feel about it,” it’s triggering. It’s understanding and uplifting one another. We are claiming that “Hockey is for Everyone,” and I do believe and want hockey to be for everyone, but we have to come together in understanding and create that allyship within one another. As far as cities around the country, I am for peaceful protests. I, as a young girl, was brought up on idolizing our great leaders like Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. I believe in peace. I don’t think hate can fix this. But I think education and using our right of freedom of speech is important.

GRANT FUHR: I think the solution is all of the above. Through podcasts, through interviews, through media, through social media, through protesting, but it’s got to be peaceful protests. That’s the biggest thing. If you’re going to protest, it has to be peaceful. You can’t have the rioting and looting, because the message gets lost. It’s unfortunate that the message has been hijacked. My perspective is, I have no issue with protests. Peaceful protesting is one way to get your point across. It was a big part of Martin Luther King’s cause. But you can’t have rioting and looting, because it takes away from that message.

A common question among non-minorities right now is, “What’s the best thing we can do to help?” Is it about getting the message out, just stopping to listen or something else?

BLAKE BOLDEN: The one thing non-black people can do, or white people if you will, is be introspective and try to realize their privilege. Even if they grew up in a household where their parents told them not to see color, that’s great, that’s amazing, but understanding you have a one-step or multiple-step advantage over other people in the country is important – why that is and how that is. So I would say to think about the ways in which you carry yourself, and if you care and are upset about these injustices, then we can make an action, whether it’s signing petitions or peacefully protesting or sharing and posting. But if you’re not the type of person who is outwardly audible about your feelings, I would just suggest you understand you have the advantage and to educate yourself. Because knowledge is power, and if we can all understand, then we all have the capability to lift the black community up.

KWAME MASON: I would say first and foremost, it’s to listen. Secondly, just let people of color know you hear what they’re saying and you support them. Almost like, “I can’t tell exactly what you’re going through, but I just want you to know that I’m here for you, and if you need me, I’ve got you. Just call me and I’ve got your back.” Those are the most important things white people can do. It shouldn’t be hard to understand that racism is bad. And if you feel racism is bad and you know a person of color, just reach out to them. Let them know you empathize with them. A lot of white people have a lot of black friends, but a lot of white people do not know some of the trauma those black people been through. It can be a matter of saying, “Did that happen to you? What was that like?” Because if you know somebody who’s been through something like that, your whole perspective is going to change: “That happened to my brother, that happened to my friend, and I don’t want that to happen to anyone else.”

SARAH NURSE: We’ve been seeing this in the past few days, especially about silence not being an option and how, if you are silent, you’re being part of the problem. Everyone is going to feel comfortable taking action in their own specific way. It’s listening and it’s educating yourself, but it’s also making your voices heard. We’re not rolling with the being color blind thing. We’re recognizing that, yes, you are black, you are white, there are differences in your skin color, but we are all part of the human race, and we should all be treated equally. So it’s definitely using your voice in a productive way. It’s educating your family and friends, and if you see something, if you hear somebody say something racist, it’s standing up and saying, “Listen, that’s not going to be tolerated here or anywhere.” There’s definitely a voice for non-black people, but it’s also about really listening and hearing the stories and voices of black people, because they’re so important, and it’s about them right now.

DAVID AMBER: The most important thing for everyone and maybe especially white people in North America: you can’t be a passive bystander. Action is needed. It’s not enough at this point to just say, “I don’t discriminate, I treat everyone equally, I show humanity and respect for people.” That’s fantastic, but you also need to call out when you see injustice, when you see discrimination, when you see wrongs. We’re at a point now where we need everyone to stand together, locked arms, and say, “Enough’s enough. We need to do this together for the good of society.”


June 05, 2020 at 05:18AM
Black Hockey Roundtable: Talking Racism Inside and Outside the Sport

New on Sports Illustrated: Report: Kevin Durant Buys Stake in MLS Team Philadelphia Union


Brooklyn Nets star Kevin Durant has reportedly purchased a minority stake in the Philadelphia Union, giving him between 1% and 5% ownership.

Brooklyn Nets star Kevin Durant has purchased a minority stake in the Philadelphia Union of the MLS, according to Mark J. Burns of Sports Business Daily. The deal is for somewhere between 1% and 5%.

It's unclear whether Durant is buying into team ownership with his personal finances or through Thirty Five Ventures, a business he and partner Rich Kleiman co-founded in 2017. Per Burns' report, both the team and Durant declined to comment.

Durant met with the Union in December, and he previously tried to buy a stake in D.C. United twice before, according to Pablo Maurer of The Athletic.

Durant joins fellow NBA star James Harden in MLS ownership. In July 2019, Harden joined the ownership group of MLS's Houston Dynamo, NWSL's Houston Dash and BBVA Compass Stadium.

Last season, the Union finished in third place in the Eastern Conference, with 55 points. The team lost to Atlanta United F.C., 2-0, in the conference semifinals.


June 05, 2020 at 04:46AM
Report: Kevin Durant Buys Stake in MLS Team Philadelphia Union

Detained US Navy Veteran Freed by Iran as Part of Deal

WASHINGTON - A U.S. Navy veteran, whose family said his only crime was falling in love, left Iran on Thursday after nearly two years of detention, winning his freedom as part of a deal that spared

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US Warns No End to Fight Against Islamic State

More than a year after the U.S.-led coalition declared victory over the Islamic State's self-declared caliphate in Iraq and Syria, a top U.S. official admits the fight against the terror group is n

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US Accuses China of Breaking Democracy Pledge for Hong Kong

WASHINGTON - The United States accused China on Thursday of breaking its commitment for democracy in Hong Kong, hours after the city's legislature passed a law making it a crime to disrespect China

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Limps and bandaged bums were once all the rage. So what comes next?

Illness has long inspired oddball fashion fads and COVID-19 will be no exception.

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Europe's new wave of female film directors is telling it how it is

A Finnish drama about sexual power imbalances will be tense viewing at a (virtual) Sydney Film Festival with a record number of female directors.

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The big takeaway: food wins from the pandemic

There have been plenty of bite-sized upsides to the lockdown – new skills, fresh loves and a greater appreciation of the need for treats, big and small.

from Sydney Morning Herald - Latest News
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Ingles' hard decision as NBA announces return

Joe Ingles will make the tough decision to be away from his pregnant wife and two young children for what could be three months as the Utah Jazz pursue an elusive NBA title.

from Sydney Morning Herald - Latest News
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Ex-Bronco Collins monsters Brisbane pack

Adding salt to Brisbane's wounds was the outstanding performance of Sydney Roosters prop Lindsay Collins – the Bronco that got away.

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Facing the home theatre FOMO

Unless you're happy to upgrade your lounge room as often as you upgrade your smartphone, you need to make peace with home theatre 'fear of missing out'.

from Sydney Morning Herald - Latest News
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ASX tipped to slide as Wall St ends winning streak

The Australian sharemarkets is poised to slide after Wall Street investors booked in profits overnight.

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NBA plans for a July 31 return, with 22 teams resuming season in Orlando

The NBA is on track for a July 31 return, with 22 of its 30 teams headed to Orlando, Florida, for a resumption of their season.

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BBC NEWS - Russia's Putin declares state of emergency after Arctic Circle oil spill

Russia's President Putin declares a state of emergency after 20,000 tonnes of oil leak into a river.


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from BBC News - World https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-52915807

BBC NEWS - Demands grow for 'green industrial revolution'

Campaigners demand the government prioritises the environment in any post-Covid-19 stimulus package.


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from BBC News - World https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-52906551

FOX NEWS:- DC Mayor Bowser vows to 'push back' on federal presence in wake of George Floyd unrest


DC Mayor Bowser vows to 'push back' on federal presence in wake of George Floyd unrest



Washington D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser made it clear Wednesday that the Metropolitan Police report to her, and that she does not believe National Guardsmen are needed in the nation’s capital to assist in maintaining order during the George Floyd protests.

via FOX NEWS https://foxnews.com/politics/dc-mayor-bowser-vows-push-back-federal-presence-george-floyd-unrest

FOX NEWS:- Ben Shapiro on Gov. Andrew Cuomo's NYPD dig, progressive response to nationwide unrest


Ben Shapiro on Gov. Andrew Cuomo's NYPD dig, progressive response to nationwide unrest



Ben Shapiro, host of 'The Ben Shapiro Show' and author of 'How to Destroy America in Three Easy Steps,' joins Martha MacCallum on 'The Story.'

via FOX NEWS http://video.foxnews.com/v/6161517536001

FOX NEWS:- Sen. Hawley slams Rod Rosenstein's oversight of Russia probe: At best he was asleep at the switch


Sen. Hawley slams Rod Rosenstein's oversight of Russia probe: At best he was asleep at the switch



Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley, Republican member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, joins Martha MacCallum on 'The Story.'

via FOX NEWS http://video.foxnews.com/v/6161513823001

FOX NEWS:- GOP convention site in limbo: Here’s where party could go


GOP convention site in limbo: Here’s where party could go



The search is on as the Republican National Committee (RNC) begins to scout out new locations to hold its August presidential convention.

via FOX NEWS https://foxnews.com/politics/gop-convention-site-in-limbo-heres-where-party-could-go

FOX NEWS:- Mattis 'angry and appalled’ as he unloads on Trump, says president ‘does not try to unite the American people'


Mattis 'angry and appalled’ as he unloads on Trump, says president ‘does not try to unite the American people'



James Mattis, who served as President Trump's first Secretary of Defense, excoriated the president in an interview with The Atlantic published on Wednesday -- urging Americans to "reject and hold accountable those in office who would make a mockery of our Constitution."

via FOX NEWS https://foxnews.com/politics/mattis-angry-and-appalled-as-he-unloads-on-trump-says-president-does-not-try-to-unite-the-american-people

FOX NEWS:- Obama 'heartened' to see police march alongside protesters, says 'vast majority' want to protect and serve


Obama 'heartened' to see police march alongside protesters, says 'vast majority' want to protect and serve



Former President Barack Obama said Wednesday he was "heartened" to see law enforcement marching alongside protesters and showing restraint, adding that a "vast majority" of them want to protect and serve.

via FOX NEWS https://foxnews.com/politics/obama-heartened-to-see-law-enforcement-march-alongside-protesters

FOX NEWS:- Senators press Rod Rosenstein on approving Carter Page surveillance


Senators press Rod Rosenstein on approving Carter Page surveillance



Former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee; David Spunt reports.

via FOX NEWS http://video.foxnews.com/v/6161507136001

FOX NEWS:- Rioters using Floyd's death to destroy democracy: Kiron Skinner


Rioters using Floyd's death to destroy democracy: Kiron Skinner



Fox News foreign policy contributor Kiron Skinner says people are using George Floyd's death as a means to act in ways that have nothing to do with race, democracy and justice.

via FOX NEWS http://video.foxnews.com/v/6161507135001

FOX NEWS:- Virginia Gov. Northam to order removal of Robert E. Lee statue in Richmond


Virginia Gov. Northam to order removal of Robert E. Lee statue in Richmond



Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam is expected to announce Thursday that the state will remove an iconic statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee from Richmond’s prominent Monument Avenue.

via FOX NEWS https://foxnews.com/politics/virginia-gov-northam-to-order-removal-robert-e-lee-statue-richmond

FOX NEWS:- Acting DHS Secretary Wolf says violent protesters are infiltrating peaceful protests over George Floyd's death


Acting DHS Secretary Wolf says violent protesters are infiltrating peaceful protests over George Floyd's death



Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf joins Bret Baier on 'Special Report.'

via FOX NEWS http://video.foxnews.com/v/6161499226001

New on Sports Illustrated: Fantasy Football: Expect Positive TD Regression for Alvin Kamara in a Contract Year


If Saints RB Alvin Kamara stays healthy in 2020, SI Fantasy Insider Corey Parson says he could be the top running back in fantasy.

When the 2019 fantasy football season came to an end, New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara finished as the RB8 PPR formats.

While averaging just under 18 fantasy points per game, fantasy owners who owned Alvin Kamara last season didn't seem too thrilled, despite the final numbers looking good.

Saints Insider Kyle T. Mosley recently wrote about the underlying concerns for the Saints talented ball-carrier:

"A question of durability has been an underlying concern for Kamara. When the Saints allowed Mark Ingram to leave for the Ravens in 2018, there were some rumblings about Kamara’s size and physique and if he can take the pounding."

Kamara played in 14 games last season as he struggled with lower leg injuries. He remains a current top 5 pick according to early ADP results, yet if you look at his yards-per-attempt it stayed elite at 4.7 per attempt. Additionally, Kamara caught 81 passes and ended up with over 1300 yards of total offense.

Here’s the real reason why Kamara owners were disappointed in his 2019 campaign: Touchdowns. He only scored six times in 2019 after finishing with 18 the season before.

If Kamara finishes with positive touchdown regression this season, he has the skills and the offense around him to perhaps finish the season as the top back in fantasy. There’s also no real threat to take away carries from Kamara at running back. New Orleans brought in Ty Montgomery for depth, and Latavius Murray is the only other running back to compete for carries. Murray stepped up last season; catching 34 passes while rushing for 637 yards and six touchdowns to overtake Kamara’s five. But a 30-year-old Murray won’t be an issue for Kamara, especially in a contract season. 

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June 04, 2020 at 05:13AM
Fantasy Football: Expect Positive TD Regression for Alvin Kamara in a Contract Year

Africa: Ebola, Hydroxychloroquine, COVID-19 – WHO Tackles a World of Health Challenges

[allAfrica] Washington, DC -Almost 50 responders from the World Health Organization (WHO) and its partners arrived today in Mbandaka in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), along with 3600 doses of Ebola vaccine and 2000 cartridges for lab testing, WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told media in an online briefing.

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WA's hard border should be lifted to create a travel bubble with SA and NT: Harvey

“It’s time for Mr McGowan to stop playing political games and end his ridiculous rhetoric that the WA economy couldn’t be reopened in a COVID-safe way without the borders," Liza Harvey said.

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Study: Trump's Favored COVID-19 Drug Did Not Prevent Infection

Hydroxychloroquine, the drug U.S. President Donald Trump took to prevent COVID-19 against the advice from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, failed to prevent infection in a new study.

In

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Before the George Floyd death in Minneapolis there was the Mohamed Noor verdict

Noor's sentence for killing Australian Justine Ruszczyk Damond was a victory for white America because he had to pay for the sin of mistakenly killing a white person.

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WA's hard border should be lifted to create a travel bubble with SA and NT: Harvey

“It’s time for Mr McGowan to stop playing political games and end his ridiculous rhetoric that the WA economy couldn’t be reopened in a COVID-safe way without the borders," Liza Harvey said.

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Raiders' Bateman goes under the knife again

Second-rower John Bateman is expected to have surgery today, his second operation on the shoulder in four months. 

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Depleted Broncos pack predict fireworks

Brisbane co-captain Pat Carrigan has backed his big men to come out swinging against the two-time defending NRL premiers.

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ASX tipped to test 6000 in opening surge

The Australian sharemarket is expected to rise to fresh three-month highs at the open, spurred on by a buoyant overnight performance on Wall Street.

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