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Sunday, August 7, 2016

American Thrasher wins first gold of Rio 2016



American Thrasher wins first gold of Rio 2016

 

American teenager Virginia Thrasher won the first gold medal of the Olympic games rio 2016 on Saturday, holding her nerve against two Chinese Olympic champions to clinch the women's 10m air rifle event.

 
The 19-year-old American edged out China's Du Li, gold in Athens in 2004, with an Olympic-record score of 208. Defending Olympic champion Yi Siling, also of China, took the bronze medal.

 

Competing in her first Olympics, Thrasher, as the first champion of the 2016 Games, was awarded her medal by International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach and said the achievement was beyond her wildest dreams.










"About halfway through when I took the lead it kind of became clear to me that I was in contention for a medal, but I quickly pushed that thought away and focused on breathing and taking one shot at a time," Thrasher said.



 


Afterwards, she noted that she had not attended the Olympics' opening ceremony Friday night and had instead gone to bed early for her Olympic debut.


Rio Olympics 2016: Swimmer Adam Peaty



Rio Olympics 2016: Swimmer Adam Peaty into final after world record 

 


British swimmer Adam Peaty broke his own world record as he reached the 100m breaststroke final but there were no GB medals on day one of the Rio Olympics.
After a new best in the heats, Peaty qualified for Monday's final (02:53 BST) in the second-fastest time ever.
GB cyclists Chris Froome and Geraint Thomas both missed out on medals in a dramatic men's road race.
But British cyclist Lizzie Armitstead can make amends when she goes in the women's event on day two at 16:15 BST.
She was only cleared to compete 15 days before the Games began after appealing against a ban for missed drugs tests.
American shooter Ginny Thrasher 19 won the first gold of the Games, while two swimming golds helped Australia top the medal table.


    There was drama elsewhere with a stray military bullet landing in a media tent and police carrying out a controlled explosion on an unattended bag
                                                                                                                                                                     near the finish line of the men's cycling road race on Copacabana's sweeping boulevard.


Trump tipping point



Trump tipping point could be upon us: Column


Edwin Edwards, the flamboyant Louisiana politician who was investigated and indicted on multiple occasions, once boasted, “The only way I can lose this election is if I get caught in bed with a dead girl or a live boy.” That was in 1983  the year he won the third of his four terms as governor.
Even if you didn’t like what Edwards had to say, you had to admire his willingness to offend media monitors and refined opinion. He was a little like Donald Trump with a career that defied the conventional rules of politics. Trump, like Edwards, routinely says and does things that should destroy his political prospects. He could be about to self destruct  — but we've said that many times before.
What is the secret of Trump's staying power? 
First, there is the authenticity defense. Trump is not a politician; he tells it like it is. He's authentic, and authentic people speak their mind and tweet from whatever portion of it happens to be awake and active in the middle of the night. You can't expect Trump to be politically (or factually) correct. This claim has had a remarkable currency in the 2016 election cycle.
Second, there is the sarcasm sanctuary. Trump didn't mean whatever ridiculous thing he said yesterday; he was just trying to be provocative or funny. Of course, if you are trying to be humorous, as Edwards often was, it helps to have an actual sense of humor. When there are no laughs, the sarcasm claim is hard to make and can only be used on a couple of occasions.
Third, and probably most important, there is the strategic use of innuendo and attribution. Trump didn’t say that Obama was a Muslim, he just thought there were
that needed to be explored. He didn’t actually know if Ted Cruz’s father was in league with Lee Harvey Oswald, he just wondered about that

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Donald Trump

The establishment media is insisting today that Donald Trump asked dictator Vladimir Putin’s Russian hackers to break into Americans’ computers



But the plain text of Trump’s lengthy 10,000-word press conference today shows him repeatedly saying that the hackers — likely Russians — should release the emails they have already hacked from Hillary Clinton’s email server at the Department of State.
missing” — refers to emails that he thinks have already been hacked and stored away in some Russian server farm. 
Logically, Trump can’t be asking the Russian to hack emails tomorrow when they have already been hacked from sloppily protected U.S. So Trump’s media-magnified sentence — “Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 e-mails that are computers, and then stashed away in a server in Siberia.
Trump also suggested that the Russians have already hacked emails from Obama’s Democratic National Committee.
When asked about the DNC emails, Trump repeatedly says Russia has likely already hacked emails from the DNC computers. According the transcript provided
But I watched this guy [Clinton campaign manager Robby] Mook and he talked aboutwe think it was Russia that hacked [the DNC computers]… assuming it’s Russia or China or one of the major countries and competitors, it’s a total sign of disrespect for our country … Why do I have to get involved with Putin? I have nothing to do with Putin. I’ve never spoken to him. I don’t know anything about him other than he will respect me …
When he was asked about Clinton’s missing 30,000 or 33,000 emails from her work at the Department of State, Trump repeatedly suggests that the Russians already hacked and stored the 30,000 taxpayer-owned emails.
Also, Clinton says her lawyers deleted those many emails, which means they are now literally impossible to hack in the future.  
So there’s no purpose or possibility of hacking already hacked (and deleted) emails. 
By the way, they hacked — they probably have her 33,000 e-mails. I hope they do. They probably have her 33,000 e-mails that she lost and deleted because you’d see some beauties there. So let’s see.
QUESTION: (inaudible) Putin (ph) say stay out? Why not say that?
TRUMP: Why do I have to (ph) get involved with Putin? I have nothing to do with Putin. I’ve never spoken to him. I don’t know anything about him other than he will respect me. He doesn’t respect our president. And if it is Russia — which it’s probably not, nobody knows who it is — but if it is Russia, it’s really bad for a different reason, because it shows how little respect they have for our country, when they would hack into a major party and get everything. But it would be interesting to see — I will tell you this — Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 e-mails that are missing. I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by our press. Let’s see if that happens. That’ll be next. Yes, sir…
So Trump accepts Clinton’s claim that the emails are deleted — and are thus impossible to hack. 

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Obama's wish about bin Laden's last moments

Obama's wish about bin Laden's last moments

US President Barack Obama. (AP)
Washington – Five years after US special forces killed Osama bin Laden, President Barack Obama says he hopes that in his last moments the terror mastermind realised Americans had not forgotten about 9/11.
In an interview with CNN broadcast on Monday, Obama marked the anniversary of what many see as one of his presidency's greatest achievements: ending the long hunt for the illusive Saudi-born Al-Qaeda boss.
US special forces killed bin Laden in Pakistan on May 2, 2011.
"Hopefully, at that moment, he understood that the American people hadn't forgotten the some 3 000 people who he killed," Obama said.
Obama discussed his decision to carry out the raid despite imperfect intelligence.
"It was clear to me that this was going to be our best chance to get bin Laden," Obama said.
"If in fact we did not take the action, that he might slip away and [it] might be years before he resurfaced.
"We knew it was going to cause some significant blowback within Pakistan and if it wasn't bin Laden, the costs would outweigh the benefits," the president continued.
"Having weighed all that, I thought about the 9/11 families and their continuing pain and sense that it was important for us to bring him to justice."
Obama leaves office in January, with Al-Qaeda significantly diminished by drone strikes and somewhat eclipsed by its offshoot, the so-called Islamic State group.

Baghdad shrine braving bomb threat

Tens of thousands flock to Baghdad shrine braving 

bomb threat

Shiite Muslim worshippers pray as they gather outside the Imam al-Kadhim shrine during a ceremony to mark the anniversary of the death of the religious figure, in the northern district of Kadhimiya in the Iraqi capital Baghdad. (Ahmad Al-Rubaye, AFP)

 Baghdad-Tens of thousands of Shiite faithful converged on a north Baghdad shrine on Tuesday for the peak of an annual pilgrimage, braving the threat of attack after two jihadist bombings.
The attacks claimed by Sunni extremists of the Islamic State group killed at least 37 people but did not deter huge crowds of black-clad pilgrims from visiting the shrine of Imam Musa Kadhim to commemorate his death.
"This pilgrimage represents a defeat for terrorism," said Mohammed Nayif, a 32-year-old from Babil province, south of Baghdad.
"We are not afraid of the explosions and nothing will stop us," he said.
An official from the shrine said that "millions" of people participated in the pilgrimage in recent days, and that more details would be released later on Tuesday.
Many of the main thoroughfares in Baghdad are closed in the days leading up to the annual commemoration of Imam Kadhim's death, an important date in the Shiite Muslim calendar.
Kadhim, the seventh of 12 imams revered in Shiite Islam, died in 799 AD. The pilgrimage to his shrine has in recent years turned into a huge event that brings the capital to a standstill for days.
ISIS has claimed multiple attacks in the Baghdad area targeting the pilgrims.
A car bomb in south Baghdad killed at least 14 people on Monday, while 23 people died in a similar attack on the outskirts of the city two days before.
ISIS considers members of Iraq's Shiite majority to be heretics, and frequently targets them in bombings.
Iraqi forces have regained significant ground from IS, which overran large areas north and west of Baghdad in 2014.
But the jihadists still control a major part of western Iraq, and carry out frequent bombings in government-controlled areas.

IPL 2016, RCB vs KKR

RCB bowling is not Popatwadi attack as Sunil Gavaskar said, says Yusuf Pathan 


IPL 2016, IPL, IPL schedules, IPL news, IPL scores, KKR vs RCB, Yusuf Pathan, Pathan KKR, Patham batting, sports news, sports, cricket news, CricketYusuf Pathan smashed 60 runs to guide his KKR team home against RCB. (Source: BCCI)
He led the Kolkata Knight Riders’ successful chase with his batting heroics but Yusuf Patha refused to agree with Sunil Gavaskar’s assessment of Royal Challengers Bangalore’s bowling, which he had termed as ‘popatwadi attack’. (Fixtures | Squads)
KKR chased down a formidable RCB target 186 with ease as Pathan smashed 60 runs on Monday night.
“Any team playing, or for that matter any batting lineup, and especially any bowling lineup cannot be called Popatwadi Attack, when teams are participating in big tournaments as IPL,” Pathan told reporters during the post-match press conference.
During a studio discussion, Gavaskar had called RCB bowling as “popatwadi attack.”
“It is his viewpoint and his perception. Whatever he said, it is according to his understanding. But look at Varun Aaron and Shane Watson, they both have represented their country for their achievements,” he said.
Pathan said when RCB’s bowling will start clicking it will become a different team.
READ: Quiet Knight Yusuf Pathan rises in Bangalore
“Unfortunately for RCB, compared to their batting strengths, their bowling has not been clicking. It is a matter of two to three games, and if their bowling clicks the team will look altogether a different side,” said.
Pathan said the 96 runs partnership for the fifth wicket between him and Andre Russel played a crucial role to clinching a victory against RCB in their backyard.
“In the initial period of our partnership, Russel took the role of going after the bowling, and I steadied the innings, which helped us build a good partnership, and from there on the target began to look small,” he said.
“We were just thinking of staying on the wicket and play shots, when the team was struggling at 69 for four,” he said.
On Gautam Gambhir’s captaincy, Pathan said he is a very good captain, and most importantly he trusts and backs his players in good or bad situation.
“Trusting and backing players in any situation boosts the morale of the players,” he said.

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Major storm knocks out power, disrupts flights in California

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