Monthly Archives: June 2021

Who Wants To Be The Next ‘Jeopardy!’ Host: Savannah Guthrie – The Federalist

Posted: June 28, 2021 at 9:38 pm

As spring quickly morphs into summer, the rotation of Jeopardy! guest hosts continues. Last Monday, NBC News correspondent and Today Show co-host Savannah Guthrie began a two-week stint behind the hosts lectern. During Guthries time as guest host, Jeopardy! will match contestants winnings and donate those funds to the Bowery Mission, a Christian soup kitchen and homeless shelter in New York City.

Guthries spot comes between two neuroscientists with dramatically different backgrounds. Mayim Bialik, an actress who obtained a doctorate in neuroscience from the University of California at Los Angeles in 2007, preceded Guthrie. Sanjay Gupta, a practicing neurosurgeon best known as CNNs chief medical correspondent, will succeed Guthrie for the episodes that start airing June 28.

The switch from Bialik to Guthrie behind the lectern resumed the parade of leftist news anchors as Jeopardy! guest hosts. Guthrie follows the likes of CNN anchor Anderson Cooper, who has compared President Donald Trump to an obese turtle (a comment for which he apologized), and former anchor Katie Couric, who said the former presidents supporters needed deprogramming (a comment for which she did not apologize).

I know of Guthrie most recently, and infamously, for her moderation of an NBC News town hall with Trump last October, during which she interrupted and overrode his answers and voters questions to talk about her own agenda. A simultaneous town hall with Joe Biden on ABC saw George Stephanopoulos (who will host a week of Jeopardy! episodes next month) call on voters who actually turned out to be a former Obama speechwriter and the wife of a former Democrat candidate for the Pennsylvania state senate. Stephanopoulos failed to disclose their party affiliations or connections.

Despite her leftist politics, Guthrie performed well in her first week as Jeopardy! guest host. She sounded encouraging towards contestants, without the overactive enthusiasm Couric occasionally displayed.

Although Guthrie commented how fastidious the Jeopardy! production staff were about proper pronunciation of clues, she did not commit any significant flubs on-camera. However, that accuracy might have more to do with the shows reportedly exacting and lengthy editing process for its guest hosts.

Guthrie is the tenth Jeopardy! guest host since Alex Trebeks final episodes aired in January. According to the shows schedule, another six guest hosts episodes have yet to air. (Following Gupta, the last five guest hosts Stephanopoulos, ABC anchor Robin Roberts, former Reading Rainbow host LeVar Burton, CNBC host David Faber, and Fox sportscaster Joe Buck will spend one week behind the lectern rather than two.)

At this point, the roster of guest hosts is tedious. Jeopardy! has taped all of its episodes for the 37th season, although the last eight weeks havent yet aired. The show has likely already narrowed finalists for the permanent hosting role, even though it may not announce them for several more weeks.

Meanwhile, as the wheel of rotating guest hosts turns, Jeopardy! continues to drop in ratings, shedding roughly 1 million viewers since January. Of course, some of the decrease may have to do with factors completely external to the show. With warmer weather and plummeting COVID-19 cases, many people are likely making up for lost time in other social activities, rather than watching television.

But the rotation of hosts hasnt helped much, either. As the show slowly finishes its round of guest hosts, Jeopardy! producers will have to hope the announcement of a permanent host in September helps bolster Jeopardy!s falling ratings.

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Scientists send seeds to space in hopes of learning how to grow with less water – WISN Milwaukee

Posted: at 9:38 pm

Parts of southeastern Wisconsin remain in an extreme drought. Conditions can be a concern for farming. But the University of Wisconsin-Madison is trying to solve the problem with an out-of-this-world experiment. Cotton seeds traveled to the International Space Station earlier this month for an experiment called "Targeting Improved Cotton Through Orbital Cultivation," or "tic toc" for short."The question we are asking is 'How does gravity make cotton roots grow?' and the experiment is to remove gravity and the only place you'll get to do that is on the space station," Dr. Simon Gilroy said.The main goal is to find a way to produce cotton using less water to help the environment."Cotton has a big environmental footprint, the best way to put that in context is to grow enough cotton to make a single t-shirt is somewhere around 700 gallons of irrigation water," Gilroy said.The findings could be beneficial for Wisconsin crops in the future."We are focused on cotton at the moment though the traits how deep the roots get, how big the volume they explore those are important for all crops," Gilroy said.Scientists are also looking at the plant's genetics and its drought intolerance."In the future, of course we are hoping to answer those same kinds of questions with space flight data on things like Wisconsin crops like corn and soybean," Gilroy said.The plants are expected to make it back July 7 to the Kennedy Space Station where they will continue to study them.

Parts of southeastern Wisconsin remain in an extreme drought.

Conditions can be a concern for farming.

But the University of Wisconsin-Madison is trying to solve the problem with an out-of-this-world experiment.

Cotton seeds traveled to the International Space Station earlier this month for an experiment called "Targeting Improved Cotton Through Orbital Cultivation," or "tic toc" for short.

"The question we are asking is 'How does gravity make cotton roots grow?' and the experiment is to remove gravity and the only place you'll get to do that is on the space station," Dr. Simon Gilroy said.

The main goal is to find a way to produce cotton using less water to help the environment.

"Cotton has a big environmental footprint, the best way to put that in context is to grow enough cotton to make a single t-shirt is somewhere around 700 gallons of irrigation water," Gilroy said.

The findings could be beneficial for Wisconsin crops in the future.

"We are focused on cotton at the moment though the traits how deep the roots get, how big the volume they explore those are important for all crops," Gilroy said.

Scientists are also looking at the plant's genetics and its drought intolerance.

"In the future, of course we are hoping to answer those same kinds of questions with space flight data on things like Wisconsin crops like corn and soybean," Gilroy said.

The plants are expected to make it back July 7 to the Kennedy Space Station where they will continue to study them.

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These tiny indestructible tardigrades will reveal how to survive in extremes of space – Space.com

Posted: at 9:38 pm

Tiny water-dwelling creatures called tardigrades known for their ability to survive in the most extreme environments will be subject to a series of experiments at the International Space Station to reveal the secrets of their superpowers.

The 0.02-inch (0.5 mm) eight-legged creatures, also known as water bears, were sent to the space station as part of the Cell Science-04 experiment aboard the SpaceX Dragon 22nd resupply mission on June 3.

Tardigrades inhabit almost every ecosystem on Earth, including the most extreme habitats such as the deep sea, volcanoes and the Arctic. The new experiment will put their adaptation abilities to test in space under microgravity conditions and high radiation, according to NASA. Scientists will keep the tardigrades on the space station for four generations to see what changes take place in their DNA over time.

Related: There Are Thousands of Tardigrades on the Moon. Now What?

"We want to see what 'tricks' they [tardigrades] use to survive when they arrive in space, and, over time, what tricks their offspring are using," Thomas Boothby, assistant professor at the University of Wyoming in Laramie and principal investigator of the experiment, said in a NASA statement. "Are they the same or do they change across generations? We just don't know what to expect."

Tardigrades are already experienced space travelers. In September 2007, the European Space Agency (ESA) sent a batch of tardigrades for a 12-day space trip aboard the uncrewed FOTON-M3 spacecraft. Most of the colony survived the exposure to vacuum and cosmic rays. Some even managed to overcome solar UV radiation that can be up to 1,000 times higher in orbit than on the surface of Earth. Past experiments on Earth showed that tardigrades may produce more antioxidants substances that slow cell damage when faced with more radiation. The Cell Science-04 researchers hope the experiment will find out whether the same happens in microgravity. The scientists will also study how the stresses of spaceflight turn various tardigrade genes on and off, NASA said.

"Checking which genes are also activated or deactivated by other stresses will help pinpoint the genes that respond exclusively to spaceflight. Cell Science-04 will then test which are truly required for tardigrade adaptation and survival in this high-stress environment," NASA added.

The critters will reside in hardware called the Bioculture System, made by NASA's Ames Research Center. The hardware allows Earthbound scientists to remotely examine cultures of microscopic creatures, or cells and tissues, while adjusting the environment as they wish.

"In the long run, revealing what makes tardigrades so tolerant could lead to ways of protecting biological material, such as food and medicine from extreme temperatures, drying out, and radiation exposure, which will be invaluable for long-duration, deep-space exploration missions," NASA said. "That's superhero-size potential for the teeny tardigrade."

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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3 Florida Girl Scouts will have their projects, artwork launched into space – FOX 35 Orlando

Posted: at 9:38 pm

3 Florida Girl Scouts will have their projects, artwork launched into space

Their science projects and artwork will head to the International Space Station hopefully in August. The plan is for them to go into a box and that box will go on a SpaceX rocket set to launch in August.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Three local Girl Scouts will soon see their ideas launch into space.

They were recognized in a science challenge for Girl Scouts across the country, beating out nearly 1,000 entries for a spot in a Faraday box set to launch into space on a SpaceX rocket in August. The box will have a special spot on the International Space Station (ISS) Lab.

The "Making Space for Girls Challenge" was a space exploration competition put together by non-profit organization SpaceKids Global and the Girl Scouts of Citrus Council, in cooperation with NASA and aerospace industry company ProXops. Girls were competing to create a winning mission patch design, science experiment, and essay related to space exploration.

Junior Girl Scout Anwesha Joshi, 11, of Sanford won in the science experiment category.

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"Its just really exciting for me," said said about the honor. Joshi drew on her love of gardening and created a "Martian Dirt" experiment. "Since the Martian dirt isnt suitable for growing plants, I thought that if you took some soil from the Earth and tried combining it with the soil from Mars maybe if you grew plants from there you could bring soil from here."

Junior Girl Scout Ashley Lassiter, 10, was named a finalist in the art category and her mission patch design artwork is heading to the ISS too. She described the experience as crazy and surreal. Lassisters mission patch design features a rocket with the Girl Scouts logo and racially diverse Girl Scouts.

"I just kind of thought of it because one of the most important things is rocket engineering... including everybody is really important so I put different ages, different colored sages different hair, different skin tones."

The winning mission patch was designed by five-year-old Girl Scouts Indiana and Golda in California. It features a female astronaut with images of Earth, a rocket and satellite. Brownie Girl Scout Maggie Ross, 8, of Deland won the essay contest where she predicted what space travel would be like in the future.

"Rocket ships will be like trains. They will [be] chained together so that many people who have dreams to go to space can go," she wrote in part of her essay. SpaceKids Global Founder Sharon Hagle said, like SpaceKids Global, the challenge is meant to inspire and empower girls to go into science, technology, engineering, art, and math (STEAM) education and jobs.

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"Today, there are over 3.5 million vacancies in the STEAM fields that need to be filled by 2025 women are dramatically underrepresented in these fields."

The competition is already inspiring girls to change those statistics. Lassiter and Joshi both say they want to become astronauts and visit Mars.

"I actually want to become a NASA engineer and help build space crafts," Joshi said. Hagle, a future astronaut who has trained where NASA astronauts have trained, said, "I want kids to know that with determination and motivation, you can accomplish anything because, after all, they were the next generation of space travelers."

The box filled with the Girl Scouts projects is expected to launch into space on August 18. Some Girl Scouts have been invited to watch the SpaceX launch.

Watch FOX 35 Orlando for the latest Central Florida news.

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How the 2023 Women’s World Cup is already boosting football in Oceania – ESPN

Posted: at 9:37 pm

One year has passed since FIFA announced that Australia and New Zealand had won the rights to host the 2023 Women's World Cup -- the first to include 32 teams and to be partly held in what can be described as a "developing" football confederation, Oceania.

The coronavirus pandemic has brought much of the sporting world to a standstill over the past year, but the 11 member federations that make up football's smallest confederation, the OFC, have been quietly readying themselves to capitalise on the boom in interest and investment from co-hosting the Women's World Cup in two years' time.

Few people were as exhilarated -- and relieved -- by the announcement as Emma Evans, the Head of Women's Football at the OFC. Having spent years working as a development officer across the region, Evans knows better than most the significance of the tournament in helping to grow the women's game across the Pacific.

"The impact that a World Cup will have on our side of the world will be so much bigger in scale than what it might be in somewhere like France, where you've already got professional football, you've already got millions involved in the game," Evans told ESPN.

"Whereas, if you focus purely on the impact it could have here -- not only on football but also on the regions across Asia and the Pacific -- it's massive. There's still so much growth that needs to happen, and I think when people here see just how good women's football is on a global scale and how big a following it has, perceptions and culture will start to shift.

"It definitely validates the work we've been doing. You feel trusted. FIFA knows football can thrive here, and that decision, that level of investment, proves it."

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In the past year alone, several women's leagues have started up or improved their formats in a number of Pacific nations -- including Tahiti, the Cook Islands, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands. Part of the boom, Evans believes, is due to FIFA's decision to expand the tournament to include more teams. With New Zealand automatically qualifying as co-hosts, the likelihood of another Oceania nation making its World Cup debut has never been higher.

Evans notes also that every country within the OFC now has "at least one women's football officers... that alone shows there are growing dedicated resources towards the women's game now. That's a big step for our region."

"To be honest, it feels like it's almost been bigger across the islands than it has been within New Zealand," Evans continued. "When I say that, New Zealand are now focused on delivering -- both what they can do with their national team and then also delivering the event itself -- whereas, for the rest of the Pacific, they've gone, 'we finally have a chance to be at a World Cup.'"

Evans' work with the OFC revolves around two major principles: Increasing opportunities for women and girls to participate in the game; and providing resources and structures to ensure women's football -- and football more generally -- can grow in a sustainable way.

"The more opportunity these girls and women have to play, obviously the better they're going to be in the long-run. But it's the same for coaches and referees; it's about making sure now that the infrastructure around them is right," Evans said. "It's fine to grow the game and have more people playing, but if you don't have the coaches and referees and administrators there to bring it to life, it's never going to be sustainable."

Finding a place to play is a particularly difficult task given the geography of Oceania. The combined land mass of the islands that make up the region is dwarfed by the several million square kilometres of Pacific Ocean between them, making even the most basic football tasks -- travelling to training and games, accessing equipment, finding new land to build fields -- especially tricky.

"There are so many issues when it comes to the geographical spread and transport among those islands; the spread is almost as big as Europe," Evans said. "It might look like the region covers all this space, but actually on that one island, there may only be one field or one area of beach to play on.

"Trying to encourage football in whatever space you can find is a big one. Making sure there are alternative formats to play -- beach soccer or futsal or other small-sided games -- is important, but that only gets you so far. At some point, you need to transition to full-sized pitches.

"Travel is another major issue. It could take two weeks to get by boat to a certain island for some of these communities. You might have an extremely talented player, but if it takes her four days to get a boat to the main city to play, and then she's expected to play or train at a national camp that week and then go back for four days on the boat again, she may have missed two weeks of school. She might also not have been in her best form due to the travel."

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Geography will also play a role when it comes to the promoting and broadcasting the tournament itself.

"There are issues with internet connections within the Pacific so there are conversations happening around setting up World Cup hubs: Where, within each country, there are certain venues fans can go to -- whether it's a stadium or a conference room -- to watch live matches," Evans told ESPN.

"How do we make the tournament as accessible as possible when travel, internet, infrastructure and timing tend to be easier elsewhere in the world? You and I [in New Zealand] can wake up in the middle of the night, open our laptops and chuck a game on; it's not quite as easy there. Taking the game to the people will be crucial.

Cultural norms and attitudes also make it difficult for women and girls to participate in football in the Pacific, where religion plays a major part in many communities and often shapes deeply the roles and responsibilities of men and women.

"In Australia and New Zealand, women's football is played on Sundays, but you can't play on Sundays in the islands because of religious views," Evans said. "It's not as simple as trying to convince them that it's fine, because the land and the fields in many of these countries belong to a particular community who will not let you play there.

"One coach told me that the biggest challenge he faced was getting families to provide their daughters the same opportunities as their sons. He'd ask them to take their son to a tournament and they'd say, 'Great! Take him! One less mouth to feed!' He might even make a career out of it.

"But you speak to them about their daughter -- same age, same talent, same situation -- and they lose a key cog in their household; their cook, their cleaner, the baby-sitter. It changes how the whole family operates. So it's hard to challenge those norms when that's something that works for them at this point in time."

Evans' hope, though, is that hosting the tournament will normalise the participation of women and girls in the game, and that creating more opportunities in football will provide them with the knowledge, skills, and pathways that don't just benefit the individual but also their families and communities more widely.

"We're now starting to see more girls staying at school or going to university, which is bringing some really educated women to the game and to the region," Evans said. "For me, what's important is creating a safe environment and platform where they can be involved in what is a very male-dominated sport and in male-dominated societies."

That, for Evans, is the most important legacy that hosting the 2023 Women's World Cup will have: Empowering women and girls across the region to dream big and pursue goals that may never have been on their horizons before.

"From an OFC perspective, [2023] is all about changing perceptions," Evans said. "It's quite a generic statement, but if we change the perceptions about what women and girls are capable of when given the opportunity -- whether as players, coaches, referees, administrators, commentators -- that will be the biggest thing that this World Cup can do here.

"It's so much bigger than football."

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A Guide to Australia Travel Restrictions and Other Regions in Oceania – Cond Nast Traveler

Posted: at 9:37 pm

The 118 French Polynesian islands, including Bora Bora and Tahiti, have reopened to fully vaccinated travelers from certain green nations including the United States, as of June 9. The broader reopening occurred along with the reopening of mainland France, after an early-opening period from May 1 during which curfews were still in place (they have since been lifted). All visitors must test negative for COVID-19 within the three days prior to arrival; full vaccination is defined as 14 days after second Moderna and Pfizer shots, or 28 days after a single-dose Johnson & Johnson shot.

Each traveler must submit an Electronic Travel Information System (ETIS) form confirming their vaccination, other health information, and travel itinerary at least six days before departure. Air Tahiti states that while officials permit unvaccinated children to enter the archipelago with their vaccinated guardian(s) if they test negative and are under-18, a compelling reason for travel will be required of anyone over age 11 who is not vaccinated.

The archipelago nation of Fiji is currently seeing its first substantial upswing of COVID-19 cases, and does not allow Americans to enter without quarantining on arrival. The country has administered coronavirus vaccinations to less than one percent of its population, though the Fijian tourism board has expressed hope that mounting vaccinations will eventually [restore] the livelihoods for thousands of Fijians, who are dependent on the tourism sector.

The archipelago of the Marshall Islands has remained closed to tourism since early 2020, which has prevented the coronavirus from taking hold in the islands. International travelers are not permitted to enter the Marshall Islands, according to the U.S. Embassy in the Marshall Islands. There has been no community transmission of COVID-19 within the Marshall Islands, and activities are proceeding as usual.

Samoas borders remain closed to tourism with most commercial flights canceled, a tactic that has kept its islands free of confirmed community cases of COVID-19 since the beginning of the pandemic. The ban on visitors extends to the U.S. territory of American Samoa; essential visitors, including Samoan citizens repatriating from abroad, are required to seek approval from the Samoan Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Except in exceptional circumstances approved by Cabinet, all international travel to and from Samoa by plane [is] ceased, the Samoan tourism board says on its website. Those who do receive permission to enter are still required to quarantine in a government facility for 14 days.

Were reporting on how COVID-19 impacts travel on a daily basis. Find ourlatest coronavirus coverage here, or visit our complete guide toCOVID-19 and travel.

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FBI investigating Antifa for violent attacks, Director …

Posted: at 9:37 pm

The FBI is investigating far-left Antifa radicals linked to violent attacks around the country, FBI Director Christopher A. Wray told Congress on Thursday.

Mr. Wray was asked his views on whether Antifa, a leftist radical group that has triggered violent attacks in several U.S. cities, is an organized group.

We consider Antifa to be more of a movement, Mr. Wray said during an appearance before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. There are certainly local and regional nodes, individuals who self-identify with Antifa who commit violent attacks, citing that as their motivation. And we have a number of predicated investigations into such individuals.

Antifa, he added is a real thing. It is not a fiction.

Mr. Wrays remarks appeared to step back from earlier comments suggesting the group was less of a threat. Last year, Mr. Wray testified that Antifa was viewed by the FBI as more an ideology than an organization.

We take anarchist, violent extremism, much of which associates with the Antifa movement extremely seriously, Mr. Wray said later in the hearing, adding that it is something we investigate very aggressively.

The number of investigations into Antifa violence dramatically increased over the past three years, Mr. Wray said, without elaborating.

Last year we had more arrests in the anarchist/extremist space than in the past three years combined, he said.

The lack of organization and structure of the group does not mean that they are any less dangerous, or less threatening, he said.

Antifa radicals have been spotted at protests in Minnesota over the recent apparent accidental shooting death of Daunte Wright by now-resigned police officer Kimberly Potter.

The shadowy Antifa radicals often are dressed in black hoodies and backpacks and in some cases helmets. They often carry shields that have been used in often violent protests.

Many of the Antifa protests took place last summer following the death of George Floyd in police custody, when Minneapolis was set ablaze by rioters.

Antifa radicals espouse anti-capitalist, anti-fascist and anti-state views while adhering to a number of left-wing and communist ideologies. The group was especially active in opposing the Trump administration. Antifa radicals also used violent protests to oppose conservative speakers on college campuses and elsewhere.

Beginning in January, the FBI shifted a large amount of its investigators and investigative resources into probing the events at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. The FBI has made scores of arrests and has resorted to social media to appeal for help from the public in identifying rioters at the Capitol.

Critics have charged the FBI has not devoted the same emphasis on investigating Antifa, a group that has terrorized several cities with violent attacks on government buildings and in the case of Portland, Oregon, created a police-free autonomous zone that sought to carve out a sovereign enclave.

Asked by Rep. Mike Turner, Ohio Republican, whether Antifa as an organization is engaged in coordinated training, financing, directions and logistics in conducting its attacks, Mr. Wray said: We have seen individual instances in small regional nodes of people coming together to train in some cases.

Antifa, however, has no major national structure, relying instead on local nodes for its operations, Mr. Wray said.

Mr. Wray said the FBI is probing into how the movement is financed but declined to provide details.

Thats something we continue to investigate, he said.

Mr. Turner said Antifa members have been deployed for protests throughout the United States.

Weve seen them burning federal buildings, self-professed members claiming to be members of Antifa, he said.

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Oceania Sevens welcome teams before the action Planet Sevens – Planet Sevens

Posted: at 9:37 pm

Oceania Rugby gave fans a sneak peak of their welcome event last night for Fiji and New Zealand as the PacificAus Oceania 7s gets ready to kick off.

Teams were seen laughing and enjoying the night as Australia welcomed their neighboring guests.

Fiji will be making their international debut since the pandemic, all eyes are on the gold medalist as no one has seen how the new Fijian squad will perform on a big stage. Jerry Tuwai will be the captain for the defending champions as they aim for a back to back gold medal at the Olympic Games.

The Australian women are the returning gold medalists from the 2016 Rio Olympics, after that emotional final match against New Zealand. Australia will be missing Alicia Quirk who was a vital player for the 2016 squad, but will be graced with the return of Chloe Dalton who had previously suffered an injury. The ladies have had all eyes on them as the pressure rises for them to come home with a second gold medal.

New Zealand was also present last evening as they enter the games undefeated by the Australian men in their previous encounter, while the Black Ferns only lost one game to the gold medalists. The New Zealand womens 7s had recently suffered a devastating blow after Niall Williams, an important player for the squad suffered a neck injury which forced her to withdraw in the Oceania 7s and Tokyo Games.

Williams took on social media to announce her absence with a tearful video of her explain the ups and downs athletes have to go through in their career.

With the fun and games of the welcome party over, teams now get down to business as they make their final preparations for the Tokyo Olympics.

All three countries will stop at nothing and will not take anything less than a gold medal as a win. The Oceania Games will kick off in tomorrow, June 25 at 12am, the games will continue till June 27 as the three teams compete for dominance before flying to Tokyo for the Olympic Games.

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‘Heavily armed’ antifa rioters descend on Oregon Capitol …

Posted: at 9:37 pm

Heavily armed protesters wearing riot gear and waving antifa flags descended on Oregons Capitol Sunday, resulting in at least three arrests.

A rioting #antifa militant was nearly run over by a truck at the Oregon state capitol in Salem. #Antifa have gathered there today with weapons. They're throwing rocks at vehicles passing by. Police are not getting involved, journalist Andy Ngo tweeted, accompanied by video of the scene.

As many as 200 armed rioters gathered outside of the Salem Capitol building on Sunday, reportedly in response to the conservative "Oregon Freedom Rally" that was planned to take place.

At one point, a rioter allegedly attacked a mans truck, and the man pulled out a gun and was arrested, Ngo reported.

Police have said reports were filed that cars passing the building were hit with balloons filled with paint and that drivers had green lasers pointed at them.

Police warned residents to avoid the area, and they also sent out an audible warning telling the protesters they were taking part in an event that didn't have a permit.

"Exit the roadway and obey all laws," they said. "Failure to do so may result in arrest. Stay on the sidewalks and exit the roadway."

The scene unfolded after advertisements for the conservative rally were sent out last month to honor those who "fought for our freedoms." Antifa then began circulating its counterprotest, Fascist Free 503, to stop the right-wing protest. Police said it had diverted freedom rally protesters away from the Capitol before 4 p.m. Antifa members dispersed by 6 p.m.

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At least three were arrested and face charges of disorderly conduct, criminal trespass, and pointing a laser.

Protests and riots plagued cities across the nation last summer and into 2021 following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25. Portland and Seattle saw the most destruction caused by left-wing rioters, with billions of dollars in damages caused to public and private buildings and businesses in those cities and others.

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Trump aides considered trying to blame Antifa for Capitol riot while it was underway, new book claims – The Independent

Posted: at 9:37 pm

While insurrectionists attacked police officers and broke windows at the US Capitol in a desperate bid to derail American democracy, former president Donald Trump's aides were trying to get him to blame the entire event on Antifa, according to a new book.

Journalist Michael Wolff describes the scene in his new book, Landslide, which documents the closing days of the Trump presidency, including the Capitol riot.

According to Mr Wolff's reporting, published in New York Magazine, Mr Trump was more concerned with continuing his crusade to prove that the election had been stolen from him, and was so single-mindedly focused on his goal that he almost seemed aloof to the severity the insurrection.

"The president, though, was digging in his heels. He remained singularly focused on the electoral challenge and had blinders on to everything else at least, that was how everybody was rationalizing something close to his total failure, willful or not, to understand what was going on," Mr Wolff wrote.

The author explained that even among Mr Trump's inner circle, allies like his daughter Ivanka viewed the riot as more of an "optics issue" than a violent attack on democracy.

Eventually that perspective morphed. By 3pm, about an hour after the first Trump supporters breached the Capitol, the then-president and his allies were trying to put distance between themselves and the attacks.

Ivanka Trump wrote a tweet around 3.15, calling the rioters "American Patriots, and asking them not to attack law enforcement officers. But even calling them patriots showed some level of support for the insurrectionists, so she deleted the tweet.

Mr Trump's staff debated for more than an hour whether he should address the public. All the while, police battled against the rioters as the nation's lawmakers were evacuated and taken to shelter.

Trump supporters clash with police and security forces as they try to storm the US Capitol in Washington, DC

(AFP via Getty Images)

According to Mr Wolff, there were three prevailing views among Mr Trump's staff: that the president should say nothing, that he should something, and that saying something could potentially make things worse.

Eventually the former president's aides presented him with a pair of tweets written in his voice that he could use to address the riot while distancing himself from it.

"Bad apples, like ANTIFA and other crazyed leftists, infiltrated today's peaceful protest over the fraudulent vote count. Violence is never acceptable! MAGA supporters embrace our police and the rule of law and should leave the Capitol now!" the first tweet said.

"The fake news media who encouraged this summer's violent radical riots are now trying to blame peaceful and innocent MAGA supporters for violent actions. This isn't who we are! Our people should head home and let the criminals suffer the consequences!" the other said.

Both tweets had the hallmarks of the administration; lying, scapegoating and a refusal to acknowledge its failures.

However, neither impressed Mr Trump, who reportedly prefers to author his tweets himself.

The then-president reportedly did not believe the riot was as bad as the news was reporting. While some of his supporters, like Ashli Babbit and Rosanne Boyland, were taking their last breaths, Mr Trump was insistent that the riots were just media hype.

Eventually Mr Trump issued another tweet, this one written by Dan Scavino, calling for peace among the rioters.

(AFP via Getty Images)

"I am asking for everyone at the US Capitol to remain peaceful. No violence! Remember, WE are the Party of Law & Order respect the Law and our great men and women in Blue. Thank you!" Mr Scavino wrote, as Mr Trump.

Though Mr Trump did not immediately run with the "Antifa" scapegoat, other Republican lawmakers leapt at the chance to exonerate their constituents by invoking boogeymen.

Later on 6 January, the Congress reconvened to finish the electoral vote count. During that time, Congressman Matt Gaetz claimed that some of the people who breached the Capitol today were not Trump supporters. They were masquerading as Trump supporters and in fact, were members of the violent terrorist group Antifa.

Mr Gaetz was met with audible boos from his fellow lawmakers as he lied directly to their faces and to the American public watching the event.

In the days after the riot, far-right media outlets also tried to push narratives claiming the rioters were actually leftists. Several publications noted that one of the rioters who was spotted at the Capitol wearing furs and buffalo horns with his face painted had actually attended Black Lives Matter and environmental justice events in Arizona, suggesting he was actually a leftist.

It later was revealed that the man in question was the "QAnon Shaman" Jacob Chansley, a dedicated supporter of both the QAnon conspiracy theory and Mr Trump.

To date, investigators have found no evidence that the violence at the US Captiol on 6 January was perpetuated by another other than supporters of Mr Trump.

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Trump aides considered trying to blame Antifa for Capitol riot while it was underway, new book claims - The Independent

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