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Child shot in the head in north Minneapolis – Yahoo News

A young girl was rushed to the hospital after being shot in the head, apparently by a stray bullet, in north Minneapolis on Saturday night.

Minneapolis police responded to a call of a shooting at 8:30 p.m. on Ilion Avenue N. on a residential block between Hillside and James avenues, said department spokesman John Elder.

They found a preteen girl and, “realizing the extent of her injuries,” raced her to the hospital, Elder said.

Many details of the shooting were not immediately clear, but Elder said police believe a red Ford pulled into the alley and the shooter fired out of the car at a home. Several children were playing in the backyard at the time, he said.

Elder said police from multiple precincts and several units, including homicide and the crime lab, will work the investigation through the night.

The shooting comes just two weeks after another child, 10-year-old Ladavionne Garrett Jr., was shot while riding in a vehicle in Minneapolis. Garrett remains in critical condition in North Memorial Health Hospital.

Andy Mannix • 612-673-4036

NYC Pride bans police from events through 2025, LGBT officers slam the move – Fox News

Organizers of New York City’s Pride Parade announced Saturday police officers and other law enforcement officials will be banned from their events, including the annual LGTBQ march, until 2025.

Heritage of Pride, which organizes the annual march, is also working to reduce the presence of on-duty New York Police Department (NYPD) officers and first responders by attempting to keep law enforcement separated from any NYC Pride event by “one city block.”

HOUSE PASSES EQUALITY ACT EXPANDING LGBTQ RIGHTS AMID GOP CONCERNS, INCLUDING EFFECT ON GIRLS’ SPORTS

The group said it has increased its security budget for the June march and “will allow NYC Pride to independently build a first response emergency plan using private security and provide safety volunteers with de-escalation training.”

In the statement released Saturday, the group said it “challenge[s] law enforcement to acknowledge their harm and to correct course moving forward.”

“The sense of safety that law enforcement is meant to provide can instead be threatening, and at times dangerous, to those in our community who are most often targeted with excessive force and/or without reason,” the group added.

NYC Pride said traditional police units will be used “only when absolutely necessary as mandated by city officials.”

BIDEN HHS REVERSES TRUMP-ERA POLICY LIMITING TRANSGENDER HEALTH RIGHTS

A fraternal organization formed in 1982 for LGBTQ officers known as the Gay Officers Action League (GOAL), condemned the move in Friday night, breaking the announcement ahead of the NYC Pride’s planned release. 

In a Friday night statement, GOAL called the decision “shameful” and “demoralizing.”

“Heritage of Pride is well aware that the city would not allow a largescale event to occur without police presence. So their response to activist pressure is to take the low road by preventing their fellow community members from celebrating their identities,” GOAL President Brian Downey said.

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Roughly 200 members of GOAL and their families participate in the march each year, Dan Dimant, a spokesman for NYC Pride told Fox News. 

Dimant said the group understood GOAL members would be “disappointed” by the move, but said the decision was a “community based” process to address concerns regarding LGBTQ safety. 

Cory Burke scores early, Union beat Red Bulls 1-0 – Yahoo News

The Daily Beast

Jeffrey Epstein Gave Bill Gates Advice on How to End ‘Toxic’ Marriage, Sources Say

Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast / Photo GettyBachelor sex-offender Jeffrey Epstein gave Bill Gates advice on ending his marriage with Melinda after the Microsoft co-founder complained about her during a series of meetings at the money manager’s mansion, according to two people familiar with the situation.Gates used the gatherings at Epstein’s $77 million New York townhouse as an escape from what he told Epstein was a “toxic” marriage, a topic both men found humorous, a person who attended the meetings told The Daily Beast.The billionaire met Epstein dozens of times starting in 2011 and continuing through to 2014 mostly at the financier’s Manhattan home—a substantially higher number than has been previously reported. Their conversations took place years before Bill and Melinda Gates announced this month that they were splitting up.Gates, in turn, encouraged Epstein to rehabilitate his image in the media following his 2008 guilty plea for soliciting a minor for prostitution, and discussed Epstein becoming involved with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.The people familiar with the matter said Gates found freedom in Epstein’s lair, where he met a rotating cast of bold-faced names and discussed worldly issues in between rounds of jokes and gossip—a “men’s club” atmosphere that irritated Melinda.“[It’s] not an overstatement. Going to Jeffrey’s was a respite from his marriage. It was a way of getting away from Melinda,” one of the people who was at several of the meetings said, adding that Epstein and Gates “were very close.”A representative for Bill told The Daily Beast: “Your characterization of his meetings with Epstein and others about philanthropy is inaccurate, including who participated. Similarly, any claim that Gates spoke of his marriage or Melinda in a disparaging manner is false.” A representative for Melinda did not respond to a request for comment for this report.As The Daily Beast exclusively reported, Melinda Gates was furious over Bill’s relationship with Epstein, and was put off by the creepy financier upon meeting him in September 2013, after the couple accepted an award at a New York City hotel. Melinda’s anger, people familiar with the matter said, eventually led to the demise of Bill and Epstein’s friendship.The Wall Street Journal recently reported Melinda Gates consulted divorce lawyers in October 2019, around the time it was publicly revealed that Bill met with Epstein—who had died by suicide in jail months earlier—multiple times in the past.Melinda Gates Warned Bill About Jeffrey EpsteinOn May 3, the high-powered couple announced they were ending their 27-year marriage in a statement that read, in part: “We no longer believe we can grow together as a couple in this next phase of our lives. We ask for space and privacy for our family as we begin to navigate this next life.” In her petition for divorce Melinda said her marriage is “irretrievably broken” and indicated the couple had settled on a plan to divide their vast assets outside the courtroom.Last week, the New York Post reported that Gates told his golfing buddies he was in a “loveless” marriage which “had been over for some time,” while People described Epstein as a “sore spot” in the couple’s relationship.But Epstein wasn’t the couple’s only point of contention. On Sunday, the New York Times reported that Gates allegedly made advances on women who worked at Microsoft and his foundation while he was married to Melinda. The Journal followed up with its own report, revealing that Gates resigned from Microsoft’s board in 2020 amid an internal investigation into an alleged sexual relationship with a company engineer, who came forward in late 2019. (“There was an affair almost 20 years ago which ended amicably,” a Gates spokeswoman told the Journal, adding that his departure from the board wasn’t related to the relationship.)People close to Bill Gates told The Daily Beast that the deterioration of their relationship could be seen in Bill and Melinda’s body language. The couple used to interact with “more laughter and ease,” said one friend of Bill, who added that eventually, “being around them was like arriving at a summit.”“It wasn’t like arriving at a dinner with a couple or something; it was more like two heads of state,” the friend added. “So that’s why Epstein could have been a factor [in their split], but was it the factor? That I fundamentally don’t believe.”The friend said the couple’s strictly regimented existence as billionaire philanthropists supplanted the more normal life and levity they enjoyed in younger years. “Bill is far less comfortable being out in the world,” the person said. “For Bill, it was just so rare he was allowed to do normal things, which I think he really craved.”To Bill, such “normal” things included meeting new people over dinner at Epstein’s home—a break from the tech mogul’s tightly choreographed schedule of events where he’d be seated at the head table with the most prominent guests.“Bill was embarrassed by the attention an entourage would have brought,” the person said. “His entourage was security, and he never looked comfortable with it. With Melinda, it was very imperious, ‘The Queen has arrived’ kind of thing.”Here’s What the Feds Found in Jeffrey Epstein’s Manhattan MansionGates may have visited Epstein, the person said, because Gates “enjoys talking and ideas and basically arguing with people, and he can be a really brutal person to argue with.”“He likes nothing better than to get together and debate or lecture people, or tell everyone what he’s doing with the polio vaccine. He has an ability, unlike any other person I’ve ever met, to lecture to a table of people without stopping for an hour.“Anyone that gave him a stage for a performance and said, ‘Bill, come talk to us about what you’re passionate about,’ that would be something he would enjoy.”Still, the person was surprised about the couple’s divorce announcement earlier this month: “I thought they would have made each other miserable for the rest of their lives.”Meanwhile, a former Gates Foundation employee told The Daily Beast that Gates wanted to get in the good graces of some of Epstein’s professional connections. “My understanding was he wasn’t hanging out with Epstein to get women,” the employee said.“Bill’s not amenable to anyone telling him what he should or shouldn’t do,” the person added. “If anyone were to say, ‘I don’t think you should hang out with [Epstein],’ it would have been Melinda.”The ex-employee said Bill and Melinda appeared to be distant and leading separate lives even more than a decade ago. “This has been going on a long time,” the source said, adding that Melinda was “bitter” and “wasn’t that into him.”“Their body language when they would be together, it was like a Melania and Donald thing: ‘Don’t hold my hand, get on the other side of the table,’” the person said, referring to reports of the former First Lady apparently yanking her hand from then-President Trump during public appearances over the years.Melinda Gates Called Divorce Lawyers in 2019 After Epstein Report: WSJAccording to the ex-employee, Melinda seemed to have a chip on her shoulder because “no one really did see her as an equal to Bill” and her work didn’t get as much media attention. “It really irritated her that people were more into Bill,” they said.Another former employee told The Daily Beast that Epstein was a topic of conversation among staff even in 2017—three years after the men’s friendship reportedly fizzled—because of concerns that Gates’ previous ties to Epstein could harm his reputation.“When you work at the foundation, your whole job in life is to protect and preserve and build up the reputation of Bill and Melinda Gates,” the person said. “I think that’s why it still came up.”Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.

Thunderstorms roar throughout the central US – Yahoo News

The Conversation

Beyond invisibility: engineering light with metamaterials

Since ancient times, people have experimented with light, cherishing shiny metals like gold and cutting gemstones to brighten their sparkles. Today we are far more advanced in how we work with this ubiquitous energy. Starting with 19th-century experimentation, we began to explore controlling how light interacts with matter. Combining multiple materials in complex structures let us use light in new ways. We crafted lenses and mirrors to make telescopes to peer out into the universe, and microscopes to explore the world of the small. Today this work continues, on a much more detailed level. My own research into what are called “metamaterials” explores how we can construct materials in ways that do amazing – and previously impossible – things. We can build metamaterials to respond in particular ways to certain frequencies of light. For example, we can create a smart filter for infrared cameras that allows the user to easily determine if the white powder in an envelope is baking soda or anthrax, determine if a skin melanoma is benign or malignant and find the sewer pipe in your basement without breaking through the concrete. These are just a few applications for one device; metamaterials in general are far more powerful. Working with light What scientists call “light” is not just what we can see, but all electromagnetic radiation – from low-frequency radio waves to high-frequency X-rays. Normally, light moves through a material at a slower speed. For example, visible light travels through glass about 33 percent slower than it does through air. A material’s fundamental resistance to the transmission of light at a particular frequency is called its “index of refraction.” While this number changes with the light’s frequency, it starts at 1 – the index of refraction for a vacuum – and goes up. The higher the index, the slower the light moves, and the more its path bends. This can be seen when looking at a straw in a cup of water (see below) and is the basis of how we make lenses for eyeglasses, telescopes and other optics. Scientists have long wondered if they could make a material with a negative index of refraction at any given frequency. That would mean, for example, that light would bend in the opposite direction when entering the material allowing for new types of lenses to be made. Nothing in nature fits into this category. The properties of such a material – were it to exist – were predicted by Victor Veselago in 1967. These odd materials have properties that look very strange compared with our everyday experiences. In the picture below, we see two cups of water, each with a straw in it. The picture on the left is what happens normally – the section of the straw in the water appears disconnected from the part of the straw that is in the air. The image is displaced because air and water refract light differently. The image on the right indicates what the straw would look like if the fluid were a material with a negative index of refraction. Since the light bends in the opposite direction, the image is reversed, creating the observed illusion. At left: normal refraction. At right: with simulated negative refraction. Water glass with straw (normal) from shutterstock.com While Veselago could imagine these materials in the late 1960s, he could not conceive of a way to create them. It took an additional 30 years before John Pendry published papers in 1996, 1998 and 1999 describing how to make a composite man-made material, which he called a metamaterial. An early metamaterial using repeating elements of copper split-rings and copper wires. D. R. Smith et al., Left-handed Metamaterials, in Photonic Crystals and Light Localization, ed. C. M. Soukoulis (Kluwer, Netherlands, 2000)., CC BY-ND Making metamaterials This work was followed up experimentally by David R. Smith’s group in 2000, which created a metamaterial using copper split-rings on circuit boards and lengths of copper wires as repeating elements. The picture below shows one such example produced by his group. The size and shape of the split-rings and copper posts determines what frequency of light the metamaterial is tuned to. The combination of these components interacts with the incident light, creating a region with an fully engineered effective index of refraction. At present, we are only able to construct metamaterials that manage interactions with very specific parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. The electromagnetic spectrum, showing all types of light, including the narrow band of visible light. Philip Ronan, CC BY-SA Smith’s group worked initially in the microwave portion of the spectrum, because working with larger wavelengths makes metamaterial construction easier, as multiple copies of the split-rings and pins must fit into the space of one wavelength of the light. As researchers work with shorter wavelengths, metamaterial components need to be much smaller, which is more challenging to build. Since the first experiments, multiple research groups have made metamaterials that work in the infrared; some are skirting the fringe of the visible portion of the spectrum. For these short wavelengths, circuit boards, copper wires and pins are far too large. Instead the structures have to use micro- and nano-fabrication techniques similar to what is used to make computer chips. Creating ‘invisibility’ Soon after the first metamaterials were fabricated, researchers began engineering applications for which they would be useful. One application that got a lot of press was the creation of an “invisibility cloak.” Normally if a microwave radar were aimed at an object, some of the radiation would absorb and some would reflect off. Sensors can detect those disturbances and reconstruct what the object must have looked like. If an object is surrounded by the metamaterial cloak, then the radar signal bends around the object, neither being absorbed nor reflected – as if the object were never there. By creating a metamaterial layer on the surface of an object, you can change what happens to the light that hits the object. Why is this important? When you look at a still pool of water, it is not surprising to see your reflection. When you point a flashlight at a pond at night, some of that light beam bounces off onto the trees beyond. Now imagine you could coat the surface of that pond with a metamaterial that worked for all the visible spectrum. That would remove all reflection – you wouldn’t see your own reflection, nor any light bouncing into the woods. This type of control is very useful for determining specifically what type of light can enter or exit a material or a device. For example, solar cells could be coated with metamaterials that would admit only specific (e.g., visible) frequencies of light for conversion to electricity, and would reflect all other light to another device that collects the remaining energy as heat. The future of wave engineering Engineers are now creating metamaterials with what is called a dynamic response, meaning its properties vary depending on how much electricity is passing through it, or what light is aimed at it. For example, a dynamic metamaterial filter might allow passage of light only in the near infrared, until electricity is applied, at which point it lets through only mid-infrared light. This ability to “tune” the responsiveness of metamaterials has great potential for future applications, including uses we can’t yet imagine. The amazing thing about all of the wondrous possibilities of metamaterials’ interaction with light is that the principle works much more broadly. The same mathematics that predict the structure needed to produce these effects for light can be applied to the interaction of materials with any type of waves. A group in Germany has successfully created a thermal cloak, preventing an area from heating by bending the heat flow around it – just as an invisibility cloak bends light. The principle has also been used for sound waves and has even been discussed for seismic vibrations. That opens the potential for making a building “invisible” to earthquakes! We are only beginning to discover how else we might use metamaterials and their underlying principles.This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. Read more:Plasmonics: revolutionizing light-based technologies via electron oscillations in metalsTen years on, invisibility cloaks are close to becoming a manufacturable realityInvisibility cloaks closer thanks to ‘digital metamaterials’ Thomas Vandervelde receives funding from the National Science Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the Office of Naval Research, the Intelligence Community, the Alexander Von Humboldt Foundation, and Tufts University.

East’s Wimbish-Gay follows sister, named MVP | Advosports | victoriaadvocate.com – Victoria Advocate

For the second straight year, a Wimbish-Gay ends her senior year as the Most Valuable Player on the Victoria Advocate All-Area Basketball Team.

Giani Wimbish-Gay follows her sister Leilani — the 2019-20 area MVP — as MVP.

Wimbish-Gay led Victoria East back to the Class 5A, regional quarterfinals as a senior, falling to Sharyland Pioneer.

Wimbish-Gay averaged 18.6 points per game, 5.6 assists, 6.2 rebounds and 5.2 steals, earning District 29-5A MVP honors and Texas Girls Coaches Association all-state recognition.

Wimbish-Gay will continue her education and basketball career at NAIA Master’s University in Santa Clarita, Calif., next season.

Q: What are your overall thoughts on your senior year and being named MVP?

A: I’m really happy how it turned out, not just myself but for the other seniors as well. Especially Brandalyn (Rice), it was a really great year for her, probably one of her best seasons. I’m just really happy that we got to play it. As for being MVP, I never really thought I would be this. It’s a blessing from God.

Q: With the COVID-19 pandemic did you think you wouldn’t get to play your senior year?

A: Yeah. I had a lot of doubts this past summer during the shutdown. I would tell my mom ‘I’m going to be behind,’ and I was getting really anxious about the season because I didn’t get to practice or play. It was just a lot for me.

Q: What did it mean to you to get to play and lead East back to the playoffs?

A: It meant so much. It was very exciting, emotional. I was happy to be there and be able to play.

Q: What basketball player have you tried to model your game off of the most?

A: I’ve just played, I’ve never really tried to be like any one player. A person that I do admire, like their style of play, would probably be Allen Iverson. He can dribble, get to the hoop. Or like Steve Nash, he had great court vision and could shoot.

Q: What’s it been like the last four years playing for East, playing with your sisters and leaving a family legacy?

A: It was very rocky in the beginning. I couldn’t separate my mother from my coach, but being able to play with my sisters, I’ll never get to experience that again. So it was a really great experience. I really appreciate it, I appreciate my mother for coaching me and dealing with me.

Q: What’s it mean to you to win MVP the year after your sister, Leilani, won the same award?

A: It means a lot. My sister’s amazing. She told me that this would happen.

Q: Thoughts on moving on to play college basketball at Master’s?

A: I think it’s really cool for me. Just to be able to play more. Basketball isn’t forever but I appreciate the opportunity. I just hope that I can be a good teammate and get better at basketball.

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LGBT Network officials to call for city resignations over pride flag dispute – liherald.com

Officials of the LGBT Network said they will call Sunday for the resignation of Long Beach Police Commissioner Ron Walsh and City Council President John Bendo, charging them both with a homophobic act for ordering the removal of a Rainbow flag, a symbol of the gay pride movement, that flew outside Riptides restaurant on the Boardwalk.

The LGBT Network announced its plans Friday. The city fired back Saturday, issuing a news release, demanding the gay rights organization apologize for “false and offensive assertions about the city, its council president and police commissioner.”

City officials amped up the complaint, saying the LGBT news release offered “two clues as to who may have encouraged the group into participating in this charade.” 

The city named Brian Wells, president of the Long Beach Police Department’s Police Benevolent Association, and Robert Agostisi, the city’s former corporation counsel. The city noted that Agostisi is being sued by the City of Long Beach for payback of hundreds of thousands of dollars in separation payments. Wells is to speak at Sunday’s news conference. 

The PBA, under Wells, recently held a vote of “no confidence” in Walsh, who took over the department in February. The PBA has listed a series of complaints against Walsh, who has denied all of them. Some deal with his character and others with his policies.

Neither side would comment until the news conference, scheduled for 11 a.m outside Riptides, at Edwards Avenue and the Boardwalk.

In its announcement, LGBT Network President & CEO David Kilmnick called on Walsh and Bendo “to step down and resign, effective immediately, following a homophobic and discriminatory decree issued by the city’s leadership.”

The Network said Riptides was recently ordered by Walsh to remove a Rainbow flag that had been “prominently displayed” on the boardwalk for years. 

The organization said also that “Walsh targeted and ordered the removal of the Pride flag but permitted all others to remain. When questioned by Riptides’ owner, Walsh responded that he had the power to remove any flag he wished. That statement was made alongside and condoned” by Bendo.

In its own statement, the city said Walsh and Bendo are owed an apology.

The city said in its release that Kilmnick “revealed that he and his organization are willingly demeaning their own important advocacy efforts by exploiting political nonsense in the City of Long Beach. In the process, they have defamed City Council President John Bendo and Police Commissioner Ronald Walsh by calling them ‘homophobic and discriminatory.'”

Long Beach officials have said the city’s code does not allow for flags or signs, other than flags of nations, to be flown on public property by private individuals.

They also said Walsh, “as a courtesy,” contacted Riptides’s lawyer, “not the owner, as stated in the LGBT Network’s press release,” and asked him to relocate two flags, not only the LGBT flag but also a POW/MIA flag, which were “mounted on the city’s boardwalk to the adjacent restaurant  property – literally a few feet away.” 

The city said no summons was issued.

Officials also said Bendo “knew nothing” of Walsh’s “appropriate and courteous actions until the issuance of the LGBT Network release, which, officials said, falsely stated that Bendo “condoned” removal of the flags.

“The attack on him by Kilmnick is outrageous,” the city said.

 “In conclusion, there is no legitimate basis for the LGBT Network to hurl personal smears and call for the resignations of Police Commissioner Walsh and City Council President Bendo,” the city said, adding that it will “explore legal recourse as a result.”

Tennessee Gov. Lee signs public school transgender ‘bathroom bill’ into law – Chattanooga Times Free Press

NASHVILLE — Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has signed into law a “bathroom bill” that allows public schools to be sued if officials allow transgender students, teachers and staff to use multi-person bathrooms, locker rooms or changing facilities that don’t match the gender listed on their birth certificates.

The governor’s action on Friday drew immediate condemnation from LGBTQ leaders who denounced him and lawmakers who passed the measure.

House Bill 1233 / Senate Bill 1367 requires schools to make “reasonable accommodations” for transgender students by providing them alternative facilities such as single-occupant or faculty restrooms.

The law specifies that the accommodations cannot include access to “a restroom or changing facility that is designated for use by members of the opposite sex.” And it defines sex as “a person’s immutable biological sex as determined by anatomy and genetics existing at the time of birth.”

It’s the first such bathroom law approved by any state since North Carolina approved in 2016 the Public Facilities Privacy and Security Act. That law triggered a widespread national backlash, including boycotts that eventually forced North Carolina officials to back down and revise their law.

Human Rights Campaign President Alphonso David charged that by advancing “hateful” legislation like the school bathroom bill, Lee and his fellow Republicans in the legislature are flexing their power to “harm and further stigmatize trans youth in Tennessee.” He said in his statement that Tennessee is “quickly becoming a national leader for anti-LGBTQ legislation.”

“Lawmakers would rather discriminate against LGBTQ youth than focus on real problems facing Tennesseans,” David said. “I want to be clear: Gov. Lee’s shameful decision to sign this baseless and discriminatory bill into law will harm the health and well-being of trans students in Tennessee by creating daily degrading experiences for them at school. These ‘Slate of Hate’ bills are unjustifiable and must stop.”

Lee had said on Tuesday in response to questions that he anticipated signing the Tennessee Accommodations for All Children Act, sponsored by Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Mike Bell, R-Riceville, and House Calendar and Rules Committee Chair Jason Zachary, R-Knoxville.

The bill “provides equal access to every student. It’s a reasonable accommodation, it allows for accommodation for every student regardless of their gender,” Lee said. “I think that’s a smart approach to the challenge. And I’ll be signing that.”

Analysts with the General Assembly’s Fiscal Review Committee this year declined to put a cost on the bill, which some charge violates federal law, saying they couldn’t peg a cost to litigation.

Asked Saturday by the Times Free Press if he and fellow GOP lawmakers had concerns Tennessee could be hurt by the law, Bell, the bill’s Senate sponsor, said, “I think at some point that the people of this state and the legislature have got to decide whether we bow down to corporate people or bow down to the LGBTQ crowd. Or do what we think is best for Tennesseans.”

The NCAA has indicated it may withdraw sports championship games from states with laws such as the bathroom measure, and other businesses have expressed similar concerns.

Bell said, “We still have all kinds of businesses and corporations coming to Tennessee because we’re such a great place to do business in, a great place to raise families in and low taxes. So we have them coming.”

He added, “They’re going to have to decide whether they want to take advantage of our great business environment, beautiful state, friendly people, low taxes or if they want to go to some place that’s not all those things and not have to, I guess, disagree with what the legislature thinks is doing what’s best for Tennesseans.”

Sen. Todd Gardenhire, R-Chattanooga, who supported Bell’s bill, said, “People that were born a certain sex ought to respect everybody else and observe the bathrooms as we have them set up. And just because somebody thinks they’re something doesn’t mean they are something.”

He said he voted for the bill because people don’t need to make other people uncomfortable or put them in an awkward position “because of your desire to be something else.”

As for any repercussions for Tennessee from potential boycotts and similar actions, Gardenhire said, “Well, this is America. If somebody wants to boycott something for some reason, that’s their privilege. Hopefully that’s the way we are in America, if somebody doesn’t agree with somebody and doesn’t want to come here, well, more power to them.”

Gardenhire, a retired financial consultant, said he believes for businesses “it usually comes down to the money. When it’s all said and done, most everything comes down to a financial decision.”

‘Slate of Hate’

The transgender student bathroom measure is the third youth-related transgender bill signed into law by Lee. The Tennessee Equality Project, the Nashville LGBT and other groups have referred to all the collective LGBTQ bills as the “slate of hate.”

Another bill signed by Lee is aimed at transgender student athletes competing in sporting events, requiring that students’ qualifications to participate in girls’ athletic events be determined by the biological sex as listed on their birth certificate.

The third measure signed by Lee, Senate Bill 1229/ House Bill 529, requires schools to provide parents or guardians of students a heads-up prior to beginning “instruction of a sexual orientation or gender identity curriculum.” It also gives adults an option to opt out their children from such instruction.

Lee last week signaled last week he is also likely to sign into law Senate Bill 126 / House Bill 1027. The amended bill would prohibit a health care professional from prescribing hormone treatment to address issues for “prepubertal minors” except in cases of growth deficiencies or other diagnoses “unrelated to gender dysphoria or gender incongruency.”

But Lee appeared hesitant about another restroom bill, House Bill 1182 / Senate Bill 1224, which applies to businesses as well as public entities — calling it “one of these bills” that “I haven’t fully made a decision about.”

It says that businesses or other entities allowing access to transgender people would be required to post post 8-inch-by-6-inch, red-and-yellow notices at the entrance of each public restroom and entrance. The signs would say, “This facility maintains a policy of allowing the use of restrooms by either biological sex, regardless of the designation on the restroom.”

Contact Andy Sher at asher@timesfreepress.com or 615-255-055o. Follow him on Twitter @AndySher1.

Gay political correspondent Steve Kornacki to develop game show with NBC TV deal – Gay Times Magazine

Openly gay MSNBC correspondent Steve Kornacki will be developing his very own game show as part of new deal.

According to a report from Deadline, Kornacki has signed a new multimillion-dollar four-year contract with NBCUniversal.

As part of his deal, the political analyst will host his own game show. The series will highlight Kornacki’s interests in sports, politics, and statistics. Further details surrounding the show is still unknown.

The game show is just one of the projects that the correspondent will be heading in the coming months.

It was also revealed that Kornacki will be joining the coverage team for both the 2021 Tokyo Olympics and the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics.

Alongside his new series and Olympics coverage role, the 41-year-old journalist is now a regular analyst for NBC’s Football Night in America and will participate in the 2022 Super Bowl coverage.

Cesar Conde, the chairman of NBCUniversal News group praised Kornacki in a statement to Deadline.

“Steve brings so much passion and genuine enthusiasm to his work, on top of his encyclopedic knowledge base, that it’s just impossible as a viewer not share his interests and excitement,” Conde, explained.

The political analyst became a social media sensation during his coverage of the 2020 presidential election. His battered tie became a meme and has been inducted into the Smithsonian.

We can’t wait to see more of Kornacki in the future.

Suns Vs Spurs: NBA Basketball Betting Odds & Trends | 5/15/2021 – TheLines.com


Suns Vs Spurs: NBA Basketball Betting Odds & Trends | 5/15/2021


















The Phoenix Suns (49-21) are heavily favored (by 10.5 points) to stop a three-game road losing streak when they visit the San Antonio Spurs (33-37) on Saturday, May 15, 2021 at 2:00 PM ET. The point total is set at 223 in the matchup.

The betting insights in this article reflect odds data from DraftKings Sportsbook as of May 15, 2021, 6:40 AM ET. See table below for current betting odds.

Suns vs Spurs Betting Odds

Suns vs Spurs Props

Looking to bet on props for this game? Use our prop search tool to find the best odds across legal sportsbooks in the US.

Injury Report as of May 15

Suns:
Deandre Ayton: Day To Day (Knee),
Abdel Nader: Out (Knee),
Cameron Johnson: Day To Day (Wrist)

Spurs:
Derrick White: Out For Season (Ankle),
Trey Lyles: Day To Day (Ankle),
Luka Samanic: Day To Day (Hand),
DeMar DeRozan: Out (Rest),
Jakob Poeltl: Out (Rest)

Suns and Spurs Records ATS

  • Phoenix has compiled a 41-28-1 record against the spread this season.
  • When favored by at least 10.5 points, the Suns are 7-6 against the spread this season.
  • Phoenix and its opponents have hit the over in 40 of 70 games this season (57.1%).
  • San Antonio has a 38-31-1 record ATS this season.
  • San Antonio has gone over the total points bet in 50% of their games (40-30).

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Head to Head

The Spurs defeated the Suns 111-85 in the last meeting between the two teams on April 17, 2021. Rudy Gay scored 19 points to pace the Spurs, and Jevon Carter scored 17 points for the Suns. The Spurs covered the spread as 12-point underdogs, and the teams fell short of the 223.5-point over/under after combining to score 196.

Date Favorite Home Team Spread Total Favorite Moneyline Underdog Moneyline Game Type Result
4/17/2021 Suns Suns -12 223.5 -770 527 Regular Season 111-85 SA*
  • 4/17/2021 DNP –
    Spurs: DeMar DeRozan
  • Scoring Trends

    • Phoenix’s games this season have resulted in a higher total score than Saturday’s matchup over/under (223 points) in 37 out of 70 opportunities (52.9% of matchups).
    • 36 San Antonio games this year (51.4% of its matchups) finished with a final score higher than Saturday’s total of 223 points.
    • The Suns have seen a 224.2 average over/under in their games this season, 1.2 points more than the over/under in this matchup.
    • Spurs’ games have a total points bet of 223.3 points this season, 0.3 points more than the over/under for this matchup.
    • The Suns have an average implied point total of 114.2 this season, which is 2.8 points lower than their implied total in Saturday’s game (117).
    • Phoenix has outscored this matchup’s implied point total (117) 32 times.
    • The 114.4-point average implied total on the season for the Spurs is 8.4 more points than the team’s 106-point implied total in this matchup.
    • San Antonio has scored more than 106 points in 46 games this season.
    • The Suns are the NBA’s ninth-highest scoring team (114.8 PPG), while the Spurs allow their opponents the 18th-fewest points per game (112.3) in the league.
    • The Suns have out-scored their opponents by a total of 380 points this season (5.4 points per game on average), and opponents of the Spurs have out-scored them by 86 more points on the year (1.2 per game).

    Suns Leaders

    • Devin Booker leads the Suns in scoring, racking up 25.5 points per game.
    • Booker’s points prop over/under for the contest is set at 33.5, 8.0 points greater than his season average of 25.5.
    • Chris Paul leads Phoenix with 8.9 assists per game and Deandre Ayton paces the squad with 10.5 rebounds per contest.
    • Ayton’s PRA prop total for the contest is set at 25.5, 0.9 lower than his season average of 26.4.
    • The Suns are led by Jae Crowder from long distance. He makes 2.5 shots from deep per game.
    • Crowder’s three pointers made prop over/under for the contest is set at 6.5, 4.0 shots greater than his season average of 2.5.
    • Phoenix’s steals leader is Paul, who averages 1.4 per game. Ayton leads the team averaging 1.2 blocks an outing.
    • Paul’s steals prop total for the game is set at 1.5, 0.1 steals greater than his season average of 1.4.

    Spurs Leaders

    • DeMar DeRozan’s strong performances this season give him the top spot on the Spurs scoring and assists leaderboards with 21.6 points per game and 7.0 assists per game.
    • DeRozan’s assists prop over/under for the game is listed at 7.5 assists, 0.5 assists higher than his season average of 7.0.
    • Jakob Poeltl’s 7.9 rebounds per game paces San Antonio’s rebounding effort. He also adds 8.5 points per game.
    • Poeltl’s rebounding prop total for the contest is posted at 6.5 rebounds, 1.4 rebounds less than his season average of 7.9.
    • Patty Mills is tops from three-point range for the Spurs, knocking down 2.4 threes per game.
    • Mills’ three pointers made prop total for the contest is set at 1.5, 0.9 shots less than his season average of 2.4.
    • San Antonio’s Dejounte Murray has the top spot on the team’s steals leaderboard with 1.5 per game and Poeltl is first in blocks with 1.8 per game.
    • Murray’s steals prop over/under for the game is set at 1.5, equal to his season average of 1.5.

    Predictions

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    Leicester players show support for Palestinians after FA Cup win – World Soccer Talk


    London (AFP) – Leicester players Hamza Choudhury and Wesley Fofana showed support for the Palestinians after winning the FA Cup final on Saturday.

    English midfielder Choudhury and French defender Fofana were seen holding a Palestinian flag.

    Choudhury had the flagged draped over his shoulders as he collected his winner’s medal after beating Chelsea 1-0.

    Tens of thousands of protesters marched in support of Palestinians on Saturday in major European cities including London, Berlin, Madrid and Paris, as the worst violence in years raged between Israel and militants in Gaza.

    A social media post from Arsenal midfielder Mohamed Elneny also showing his support for the Palestinian people has been hit by a backlash from Jewish fans.

    The Egyptian posted on his Twitter account: “My heart and my soul and my support for you Palestine.”

    Arsenal confirmed to Sky Sports that they have spoken with Elneny after concerns about the post were raised from one of the club’s sponsors, coffee maker Lavazza.

    “As with any employees of Arsenal, our players are entitled to express their views on their own platforms,” the club told Sky Sports News.

    “That said we have spoken to Mo about this so he understands the wider implications of his post.

    “As a club we are committed to confronting and eliminating all forms of discrimination and continue to champion the need for equality and diversity across all areas of life.”

    Club Cobra, A North Hollywood Gay Bar, Uses OnlyFans To Its Advantage – The Pride LA

    Club Cobra, a North Hollywood gay bar, is using the popular OnlyFans site to its advantage amidst the pandemic. 

    Since spreading rapidly last year the Covid-19 pandemic has decimated numerous businesses throughout the United States. The hardest hit being restaurants, nightclubs and bars especially LGBTQ spaces. 

    Club Cobra, a LatinX LGBTQ space on Burbank Blvd, popular for its drag shows in Spanish, go-go dancers and the longest running trans LatinX night in Los Angeles has been hit hard by Covid-19. 

    Marty Sokol, founder of Club Cobra, has turned to filming content for OnlyFans to keep the club alive. OnlyFans is a platform where people can pay to subscribe to their favorite creators to view often pornographic photos and videos.

    However Cobra’s fog-filled exotic dances are filmed at Sokol’s home without nudity. One of the programs that Sokol says he’s trying to bring back is based on the club’s show Transfix. It’s the only trans-focused night in L.A. run by trans women. It’s been a place where trans people could come for advice, friends and safe hookups. Most of all, it’s been a special community for trans people to share experiences.

    The Club Cobra team has made it work despite expensive costs. They use high-quality lights, camera gear and editing software to produce the shows every week.

    Sydney native, Antony Tadros, has worked for Sokol for almost five years and is the self-described jack-of-all-trades for Club Cobra from bartending to booking talent. Now, he films the show. He says Club Cobra’s pivot to OnlyFans has helped the team connect more as a family.

    Sokol has plans to bring back Club Cobra in person but will still create content on OnlyFans even after the club reopens. 

    NYC Pride parade bans police; Gay officers ‘disheartened’ – RiverBender.com

    NEW YORK (AP) — Organizers of New York City’s Pride events said Saturday they are banning police and other law enforcement from marching in their huge annual parade until at least 2025 and will also seek to keep on-duty officers a block away from the celebration of LGBTQ people and history.

    In their statement, NYC Pride urged members of law enforcement to “acknowledge their harm and to correct course moving forward.”

    “The sense of safety that law enforcement is meant to provide can instead be threatening, and at times dangerous, to those in our community who are most often targeted with excessive force and/or without reason,” the group said.

    It will also increase the event’s security budget to boost the presence of community-based security and first responders while reducing the police department’s presence.

    Police will provide first response and security “only when absolutely necessary as mandated by city officials,” the group said, adding it hoped to keep police officers at least one city block away from event perimeter areas where possible.

    Word of the ban came out Friday when the Gay Officers Action League said in a release it was disheartened by the decision.

    The group called the ban an “abrupt about-face” and said the decision “to placate some of the activists in our community is shameful.”

    The parade is scheduled for June after the coronavirus prevented many Pride events worldwide last year, including in New York which instead hosted virtual performances in front of masked participants and honored front-line workers in the pandemic crisis.

    The disruptions frustrated activists who had hoped to collectively mark the 50th anniversary of the first Gay Pride parades and marches in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco in 1970.

    Those marches came a year after the 1969 uprising outside Manhattan’s Stonewall Inn, a gay bar, in response to a police raid. The uprising is largely credited with fueling the modern LGBTQ rights movement.

    Pride season occurs this year amid activism inspired by the response to racial injustice and police brutality in the wake of George Floyd’s death last year at the hands of police in Minneapolis.

    Pride NYC’s announcement Saturday follows a division among organizers in recent years in planning for celebrations of LGBTQ pride in New York City.

    In 2019, there were two marches in Manhattan after some in the community concluded that the annual parade had become too commercialized. The Queer Liberation March aimed for a protest vibe, saying the main Pride march was too heavily policed by the same department that raided Stonewall a half century earlier.

    The New York Police Department commissioner apologized for the raid during a briefing in 2019, calling it “wrong, plain and simple.”

    Detective Sophia Mason, a spokesperson for the New York Police Department, said on Saturday the department’s “annual work to ensure a safe, enjoyable Pride season has been increasingly embraced by its participants.”

    She added: “The idea of officers being excluded is disheartening and runs counter to our shared values of inclusion and tolerance. That said, we’ll still be there to ensure traffic safety and good order during this huge, complex event.”

    Woman strikes stop sign, parked vehicle, leads officers on short chase in Watertown – Yahoo News

    Bloomberg

    Fraud Probe Rocks Gupta Empire Just as It Seemed to Win Lifeline

    (Bloomberg) — Sanjeev Gupta’s plans to save his embattled industrial empire suffered a major setback as the U.K. opened a fraud investigation, prompting a potential financial partner to walk away.For two months, Gupta has been scrambling to refinance after the collapse of his group’s main lender, Greensill Capital, and recently looked close to winning a reprieve — helped along by a surging commodity prices.But on Friday, the Serious Fraud Office announced a probe into Gupta’s GFG Alliance, including into the financing arrangements with Greensill. That prompted White Oak Global Advisors LLC — which had recently offered a lifeline with terms for a 200 million-pound ($282 million) loan for Gupta’s U.K. steel business — to walk away. White Oak was also behind funding for part of Gupta’s Australian assets, the Australian Financial Review has said.“As with any regulated financial institution, we are not in a position to continue discussions with any company that is under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office for money laundering,” White Oak said in a statement.GFG said Friday it will co-operate fully with the SFO investigation. It declined to comment on White Oak’s decision.The fraud probe also puts other efforts to replace about $5 billion Gupta had borrowed from Greensill in question.On Thursday, Gupta had conveyed a much brighter outlook, expressing confidence of a “new future” for his sprawling group of companies. On a podcast for employees, he said it had been “relatively easy to get refinancing” for the Whyalla mill in Australia. He also said that GFG had been “inundated by offers to help and to finance,” partly due to strong commodity markets.The picture is now bleaker in the wake of the SFO investigation, which follows months of scrutiny from lawmakers and the media over Gupta and Greensill’s financing practices. GFG has come under the microscope after the collapse of Greensill in March revealed it had been a recipient of financing based on expected future invoices, for sales that were merely predicted.Trading ActivitiesThe exact scope of the SFO investigation isn’t yet clear. Bloomberg has reported four banks stopped working with Gupta’s Liberty House Group trading business, starting in 2016, amid concerns about what they perceived to be problems in paperwork provided by Liberty, Bloomberg News has reported. In one example, the company had presented a bank with what seemed to be duplicate shipping receipts. A spokesman for Gupta has denied any wrongdoing.The two-month period it took from starting to covertly look into GFG and its financing by Greensill to announcing a formal probe is a quick turn-around for the SFO, which often takes years to publicly confirm it’s taking action against a company.It will now start to gather evidence, including securing devices and documents. However, it’ll likely take years for the office to make any tangible updates to the investigation, including whether it decides to charge individuals as part of the probe.The funding from Lex Greensill’s eponymous firm helped GFG expand at an astonishing rate in the past five years by targeting old, unwanted assets. His loose collection of companies now employs some 35,000 people worldwide, with steel and aluminum plants in the U.S., U.K., France, Romania and Australia.Staying afloat would enable Gupta to enjoy some of the best times his industrial businesses have seen. Steel prices are near an all-time high as demand recovers from the coronavirus pandemic and China cuts capacity to curb pollution. Aluminum, Gupta’s other major business, hit a three-year high this week amid a broad commodities boom.Still, Greensill’s collapse has already taken a major toll on Gupta’s businesses. On Thursday, his Wyelands Bank said it would be wound up if it can’t find a buyer. His steel units in France and Belgium have started creditor protection procedures, he’s approached buyers for some of his engineering assets, people familiar with the matter have said, and also sought buyers for two steel plants in France.For governments too, there is much at stake. Countries that once feted him as a savior for buying decrepit assets may have to pick up the pieces, due to the jobs at risk and some assets’ strategic importance to industry.For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

    NYC Pride parade bans police; Gay officers ‘disheartened’ – Hastings Tribune

    NEW YORK (AP) — Organizers of New York City’s Pride events said Saturday they are banning police and other law enforcement from marching in their huge annual parade until at least 2025 and will also seek to keep on-duty officers a block away from the celebration of LGBTQ people and history.

    In their statement, NYC Pride urged members of law enforcement to “acknowledge their harm and to correct course moving forward.”

    “The sense of safety that law enforcement is meant to provide can instead be threatening, and at times dangerous, to those in our community who are most often targeted with excessive force and/or without reason,” the group said.

    It will also increase the event’s security budget to boost the presence of community-based security and first responders while reducing the police department’s presence.

    Police will provide first response and security “only when absolutely necessary as mandated by city officials,” the group said, adding it hoped to keep police officers at least one city block away from event perimeter areas where possible.

    Word of the ban came out Friday when the Gay Officers Action League said in a release it was disheartened by the decision.

    The group called the ban an “abrupt about-face” and said the decision “to placate some of the activists in our community is shameful.”

    The parade is scheduled for June after the coronavirus prevented many Pride events worldwide last year, including in New York which instead hosted virtual performances in front of masked participants and honored front-line workers in the pandemic crisis.

    The disruptions frustrated activists who had hoped to collectively mark the 50th anniversary of the first Gay Pride parades and marches in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco in 1970.

    Pride season occurs this year amid activism inspired by the response to racial injustice and police brutality in the wake of George Floyd’s death last year at the hands of police in Minneapolis.

    Pride NYC’s announcement Saturday follows a division among organizers in recent years in planning for celebrations of LGBTQ pride in New York City.

    In 2019, there were two marches in Manhattan after some in the community concluded that the annual parade had become too commercialized. The Queer Liberation March aimed for a protest vibe, saying the main Pride march was too heavily policed by the same department that raided Stonewall a half century earlier.

    The New York Police Department commissioner apologized for the raid during a briefing in 2019, calling it “wrong, plain and simple.”

    Detective Sophia Mason, a spokesperson for the New York Police Department, said on Saturday the department’s “annual work to ensure a safe, enjoyable Pride season has been increasingly embraced by its participants.”

    She added: “The idea of officers being excluded is disheartening and runs counter to our shared values of inclusion and tolerance. That said, we’ll still be there to ensure traffic safety and good order during this huge, complex event.”

    NYC Pride bans NYPD from participating in events, including march – Yahoo News

    Starting this June, police and corrections will not be allowed to participate in the Pride March until at least 2025.

    Video Transcript

    NYC Pride today announced that police will be banned from taking part in the Pride March and other events until at least the year 2025. Organizers also say they’ll be working with a private security firm and will ask the NYPD to stay a block away from all events. The Gay Officers Action League called the decision “shameful, demoralizing, and dehumanizing.” The co-chair of NYC Pride says the group is taking into account the comfort of the community.

    ANDRE THOMAS: We, as an organization, decided we needed to put in place as much as a buffer between our community who feels a sense of unsafety or uncomfortable when they see officers in uniform, especially trans people of color in our community who see the uniform and what it represents.

    An NYPD spokesperson tells us, quote, “The idea of officers being excluded is disheartening and runs counter to our shared values of inclusion and tolerance. That said, we’ll still be there to ensure traffic safety and good order during this huge complex event.”