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Entertainment

Kanye’s Donda Academy sued for ‘unlawful parenting practices’

Kanye West’s Donda Academy is reportedly being sued for allegedly following “unlawful educational practices.” Accordingly TMZYe and his Christian private school are being sued by two black women.

The women claim to have been dismissed from school as teachers for a number of reasons. This reportedly includes retaliation for being a whistleblower over alleged violations of education, health and safety regulations. The women also believe they were unfairly dismissed because of their race.

Lawsuit brought by the only two black teachers fired from Donda Academy

According to the women, they were hired full-time at Donda Academy earlier this year. They claim that they were the only black teachers employed by the school.

During their time at the academy, the women are said to have noticed numerous violations. A cited violation was that the only lunch option for students was sushi – every day. In addition, students are not allowed to bring food or drinks into the school from outside.

The lawsuit, reportedly received by the outlet, shows Kanye spending $10,000 a week on sushi.

The teachers said that Kanye doesn’t allow crosswords or coloring sheets in the school and that classes couldn’t be held on the second floor because Kanye was “afraid of stairs.”

No chairs allowed, no artwork on the walls, no jewelry, no forks, no utensils

Ye also does not allow students to use forks or utensils. The lawsuit also alleges that Kanye doesn’t allow any artwork on the school’s walls and that no one is allowed to wear jewelry for the simple reason that he “didn’t like jewelry.” The teachers even accuse Kanye of not allowing chairs; This forces children to sit or stand on foam cushions. Meanwhile, teachers are allowed to stand or use a stool.

The suit states that everyone at the academy must wear all-black clothing from head to toe. Adidas and Nike garments were also banned.

It is also claimed that the school does not have a caretaker or nurse and that there are no trash cans outside of the classrooms or kitchen. The two teachers say student medication was kept in a cupboard while other expired medication was left unsecured.

Inside Kanye West’s Donda Academy. The school is not accredited and looks very cult like and a dump. The school only erratically reopened by West a day after it closed. I would suggest that Simi Valley Child Services and Police check this place out. pic.twitter.com/RI7VkkzvPv

— Mike Sington (@MikeSington) October 27, 2022

Teachers claim that there are no lesson plans or disciplinary protocols for bullying and violence

Teachers also claim that there are no lesson plans or disciplinary protocols in place, leading students to be undisciplined over bullying and attacks on teachers and other students. The teachers, who were not immediately named, even claim they were threatened not to speak to Kanye about the issues after they brought it to the attention of others. The women were eventually fired, and now they blame their resignation on racial discrimination and retaliation on those grounds. They are also suing Kanye and Donda Academy for money, alleging that their paychecks are often $2,700 per pay period short. Kanye’s camp has yet to respond to TMZ’s request for comment.

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Sport

All eyes on Koepka, the Massive three and the prediction

8:43 p.m. ET

  • Paul UggettiESPN

Augusta, Ga. — Brooks Koepka declined to share the gruesome details of the injury. But after blasting a 7-under 65 to level with Jon Rahm and Viktor Hovland for a first-round lead at the Masters, he was committed.

The now LIV Golf Tour member and four-time Major winner explained how he slipped at home, dislocated his knee and shattered trying to reinsert it, only to tear one of the ligaments around his patella.

“My leg was sideways and outside. My foot was turned outside,” Koepka said. “And when I snapped it back into place because the kneecap was already broken, it went in pretty well. It was much easier.”

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In a revealing post-round interview, Koepka detailed the journey back from the injury that once prevented him from bending his knee and caused him to miss the incision at the 2021 Masters following his surgery.

Before the injury and before joining LIV last year, Koepka was not only considered one of the best players in the world, but also a player who excelled almost exclusively at majors. He built a reputation for being casual at all events other than majors and seemed to benefit from an attitude of apathy towards golf. The Netflix episode of “Full Swing” that Koepka starred in showed another side of the former top player in the world – he cared about golf and about winning. A lot.

“I think it was good. People probably don’t think I’m as open as I really am,” Koepka said. “I’m going to tell you exactly how I’m feeling at the time, how I’m feeling right now. I’m also quite vulnerable off the golf course. I’ve always said what you see on the Gulf of course isn’t what you get behind closed doors.”

Brooks Koepka shot a 7-under 65 to level the first-round lead. Getty Images

On Thursday, it looked like we’d seen both sides of Koepka: the dominant golf team, who hit 12 of 14 fairways and 15 greens and finished with three birdies in his last four holes, and the slightly more vulnerable and open personal side.

“I wish I’d celebrated the little milestones along the way instead of thinking I could just do it,” Koepka said of his injury. “It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever worked just trying to come back because I felt like I was on the cusp of it and it was nice to know I could pull through that.”

Many doubts have arisen since Koepka joined LIV, including whether he would be able to conjure up the level of golf that for a brief but notable period made him the most dominant player in the game. Thursday was just one round, but if Koepka not only recovers but starts playing like that again, the current best players in the world may have to worry about another player alongside Rory McIlroy, Rahm and Scottie Scheffler on Friday and beyond.

Here are four other things to watch out for at Masters on Friday:

Check in with the Big Three

Jon Rahm impressed on Thursday with seven birdies and an eagle on his way to 7-under. Getty Images

Speaking of McIlroy, Rahm and Scheffler, all three had very different laps on Thursday. Scheffler didn’t play his best golf – which to him just means he didn’t finish the round in first place – but he still played well enough to close after an eagle, four birdies and three from the lead with 4-under and three only finish a bogey.

Rahm was the one who rose to the top in the first round, starting with an uncharacteristic four-putt on the first hole before rattling seven birdies and an eagle on his way to the 7-under. It felt like the Spaniard was entering this tournament as the least hyped of this trio and he was quick to show why he could be the favorite as the event entered round two.

McIlroy, meanwhile, had a roller coaster opening round, carding five birdies but equalizing with three bogeys and a double bogey to finish evenly. While that might be a disappointment on a normal day, McIlroy’s opening rounds at Augusta National Golf Club weren’t exactly outstanding. In fact, his 72 on Thursday was his best opening round at the Masters since 2017. There’s still plenty of golf to play, and while many in the field have concerns about worsening weather, McIlroy could thrive on it.

Winter is coming (somehow)

Friday and Saturday are forecast to be days with a 90% chance of rain or higher in Augusta. Matt Slocum/AP photo

Thursday was an idyllic day at Augusta National as the weather in Georgia was perfect for spring. This won’t last. With heavy rain expected in Augusta over the next two days, it’s unclear what the second and third rounds will look like, whether they can be completed, or how it will affect player performance. One thing was certain: a low result on Thursday was needed.

“Today was the right time to get the round under par,” said Tiger Woods. “Most of the guys are down today. That was the day for it.”

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As Rahm pointed out on Thursday, Augusta’s usual inclement weather is leading to a halt for thunderstorms, delaying the tournament but softening the course and making it more receptive to goals after the weather clears. Friday and Saturday are forecast to be days with a 90% or greater chance of rain.

“When it’s softer, you’re going to see guys attacking that golf course a little better,” said Patrick Reed, who shot a 1-of-71. “If the wind stays down like today, you’re going to see a lot of low scores.”

The forecast is expected to include wind speeds of between 10 and 20mph on both Friday and Saturday and should the tournament extend well into Sunday and perhaps Monday the forecast will be clearer and could have even lower results than Thursday make possible.

Mickelson shows signs of life

Phil Mickelson is looking to make his first cut at a major since winning the 2021 PGA Championship. Getty Images

In a surprising turn of events, it was Phil Mickelson – not Woods – who got the lower score of the two on Thursday. The 52-year-old shot 1-for-71 while Woods shot for 73 in his first big round of the year. Mickelson has struggled a lot on the LIV Tour this season, finishing 27th, 32nd and 41st in three events so far. His last major appearance was a missed cut at the US Open.

But according to Mickelson, there’s something about Augusta that fits his aging, imperfect game.

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“I feel like you can play this golf course and you don’t have to be perfect,” Mickelson said. “As long as you put it in the right spots, you can kind of manage your game and shoot a number. I think that’s why I always enjoy playing here, because it makes me feel a little bit more relaxed, like I don’t have to be perfect.”

Whether Mickelson can continue like this and make his first cut at a major since winning the 2021 PGA Championship remains to be seen, but given where the frontrunners lie, both could be fighting to make the cut on Friday. Who knows, maybe we’ll see them together this weekend.

The Sam Bennett Show

Sam Bennett caused a stir, becoming the first amateur to finish in the top 10 after the first round since 2005. Jae C Hong/AP Photo

Ahead of Thursday’s first round, there was a lot of talk about an amateur in the field. That was NCAA singles champion Gordon Sargent, who wowed players like Justin Thomas, Max Homa and McIlroy with his ridiculous ball speed and reach. However, when Thursday was over, it was US amateur champion Sam Bennett who stole the show.

Bennett and his unique distorted swing played alongside Homa and Scheffler to finish 4th among the best player in the world while shooting four shots better than Homa. The Texas A&M senior was unimpressed all day, starting his round with a birdie on a 1 and an eagle on a 2. He put on another birdie on the par 3 sixth hole and rounded those red scores with 15 pars, including 12 straight a bogey-free lap to the finish.

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“I couldn’t have asked for a better start,” said Bennett. “Bogey-free, that’s probably what I love most of all. Walking around this place without a bogey is pretty cool.”

The score not only made Bennett the first amateur since Ryan Moore in 2005 to finish in the top 10 after the first round. His score of 68 was the lowest by an amateur in a Major since Hovland’s 67 in the final round of the 2019 US Open.

It’s unclear if Bennett can keep this up for the rest of the week, but it will be a blast watching him try.

Categories
Technology

Mammoth meatball beef exposes foodtech’s patent challenge

A bitter feud has erupted over who first resurrected the woolly mammoth – as a meatball.

The extinct delicacy was unveiled last week at the Science Museum Nemo in the Netherlands. Of course, no mammoths were harmed in the making of this product – and no other animals either. Instead of dead meat, an Australian startup called Vow made the meatballs out of DNA.

First, the team identified the DNA sequence for mammoth myoglobin, a protein that produces a meaty taste. To fill in some gaps in the sequence, they added genetic data from the African elephant – the pachyderm closest living relatives. Using a low-current, high-voltage charge, they then inserted the gene into stem cells from a sheep. Eventually they multiplied and formed the cells into a paste.

The mammoth meatball was made from extinct animal DNA. Photo credit: Aico Lind

It certainly looks good, but did it pass the taste test? It seems like an essential question, but it is unfortunately one that remains unanswered. To the disappointment of brave diners, the meatball is unfit for human consumption.

This anticlimactic result sparked accusations that the whole endeavor was a publicity stunt. However, the project team insists that their experiment serves an important purpose: to demonstrate the potential of cultured meat to transform the food industry. They note that food production generates copious amounts of greenhouse gases and a loss of biodiversity. Cultured meat, they argue, offers a sustainable alternative.

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“Our goal is to start a conversation about how we eat and what the alternatives of the future might look like and taste like,” said Bas Korsten, a marketing director who initiated the project. “Cultivated meat is meat, but not as we know it. It’s the future.”

The meatball was created as a launch pad for technology – and for vow. Apparently rightly so, the company is now claiming to be rewriting the food rules. But a rival claims he’s also rewriting the rules of decency.

mammoth meatA pack of meat you can’t eat. Photo credit: Aico Lind

When Vow was praised in the Netherlands, a very different reaction was brewing the border.

In Belgium, a scale-up called Paleo was considering legal action. The company was furious over claims that Vow presented a mammoth protein for the first time.

Paleo argues that it ddeveloped the myoglobin technology two years earlier. The company had also filed patent applications at the time, which Paleo says have been publicly available to competitors for nearly a year.

Paleo contacted Vow ahead of the event in The Netherlands. According to the Belgian scaleup, Vow’s legal team argued that the mammoth meatball was “not food” and dismissed Paleo’s claims.

“When we found out about the event, we were surprised,” said Hermes Sanctorum, CEO of Paleo. “We sent out a press release nine months ago to announce that we have developed the exact same thing Mammoth Protein (Myoglobin), based on our fundamental research and innovation.

“When Vow claims no one tasted Mammoth Myoglobin, that’s just not true. We developed them Mammoth Myoglobin and we tried it in our lab.”

Paleo co-founders: CEO Hermes Sanctorum (left) and COO Andy de Jong.Paleo co-founders Hermes Sanctorum (left) and Andy de Jong had theirs Patent application published by the World Intellectual Property Organization. Photo credit: Paleo

Vow has denied the allegations.

“The technology and innovation involved in Vow’s creation and presentation of the ‘Mammoth Meatball’ owes nothing to any technology or purported invention of Paleo,” the company said in a statement.

“The ‘Mammoth Meatball’ was conceived, developed and manufactured entirely through the hard work and ingenuity of Vow’s own scientists (and collaborators) and using a combination of publicly available genetic data and Vow’s own proprietary production processes.”

Paleo was satisfied with the answer. The company said Vow confirmed it was indeed not presenting mammoth myoglobin for the first time. Nonetheless, Paleo believes Vow has crossed a red line — but the patents could prove difficult to enforce.

Paleo develops various animal heme proteins through precision fermentation.Paleo develops various animal heme proteins through precision fermentation. Photo credit: Paleo

loud vows, he was only blamed for it the idea of ​​creating something with mammoth myoglobin. Vow argues that Paleo has no basis to claim this idea as its own.

In addition, the startup notes that an examiner at the European Patent Office considered Paleo’s patent application to be likely invalid. The Australian company described the application as an “attempted land grab of outrageous proportions”.

“Patent rights exist to protect innovation and (if granted and valid) can protect truly new, innovative and proprietary ideas; but Paleo has no such patent rights,” Vow said in his statement. “Paleo has no issued patent related to mammoth myoglobin and therefore has no legitimate claim.”

Vow also criticized the pending application. If granted, the startup warned that the patent would prevent companies from using myoglobin from a variety of animals — including pig, sheep, cow, chicken, tuna, and of course mammoth — as a meat substitute or food ingredient.

The feud will continue for now. Regardless of the outcome of the dispute has revealed the complexity of patenting food innovations.

Categories
Health

FTC Grail Order Illumina invocation is ‘an nearly unattainable struggle’

Carl Icahn, Chairman of Icahn Enterprises Holdings

Scott Eelis | Bloomberg | Getty Images

That’s what Carl Icahn said on Wednesday EnlightenmentEfforts by to appeal a Federal Trade Commission order to divest the highly controversial Grail acquisition “is a nearly impossible battle.”

Illumina told CNBC Monday that it intends to appeal the FTC’s order in federal court and seek an expedited decision. This objection will come with “high costs” for the DNA sequencing company, the activist investor argued in his recent open letter to shareholders.

“Our biggest concern as a major shareholder is that this multi-year struggle will consume copious amounts of cash and drag on for years, luxury Illumina doesn’t have,” wrote Icahn, who owns a 1.4% stake in Illumina.

The company’s market value has already fallen to about $36 billion from about $75 billion in August 2021, the month it completed its acquisition of cancer test developer Grail.

Icahn launched a proxy battle over the Grail deal last month, seeking seats on Illumina’s board of directors and urging the company to reverse the deal. He shares common ground with the FTC, which argued in its order that the $7.1 billion deal would stifle competition and innovation.

The FTC’s order overturns an administrative judge’s September ruling that dismissed the commission’s initial challenge to the Grail deal.

In his letter, Icahn highlighted Illumina’s “long history” of filing regulatory challenges for the acquisition.

The company appealed a similar order from EU regulators last year to scrap the Grail deal. The EU’s executive body, the European Commission, blocked the acquisition of Illumina in September over concerns it would hurt consumer choice and innovation.

San Diego-based Illumina expects a decision on its appeal against the European Commission and FTC orders in late 2023 or early 2024.

The company said in a statement to CNBC on Wednesday that it had “strong grounds for appeal” against the FTC’s order. It pointed to how it had prevailed over the Commission last year.

Illumina also pushed back the last order.

“The FTC’s decision breaks precedent and goes against the overwhelming evidence that Illumina and GRAIL reunification will promote competition and save lives,” Illumina told CNBC.

Illumina shares ended relatively unchanged on Wednesday afternoon.

More beatings on the Illumina CEO

Icahn fired more shots at Illumina CEO Francis deSouza on Wednesday after criticizing the executive — and his raise — last week.

The investor claimed deSouza “allowed our potentially great company to deteriorate.

“His shareholder-funded GRAIL adventure is a desperate ‘Hail Mary’ power grab to try and reverse Illumina’s demise,” Icahn wrote.

He added that the Grail deal is deSouza’s “second major M&A failure” since he took over as CEO in 2016. In 2020, Illumina canceled a $1.2 billion merger with Pacific Biosciences of California after the FTC challenged the acquisition.

Icahn reiterated his call for Illumina to replace deSouza with the company’s former CEO, Jay Flatley, or “someone else at his level.”

Last week, Icahn said the company needs “someone who knows what they’re doing to fix the situation.”

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Science

We now have a map of all 85,000 volcanoes on Venus

A new map, created using decades-old radar images from NASA’s Magellan mission from the 1990s, shows the locations of a whopping 85,000 volcanoes on Venus. The detailed map shows where the volcanoes are located, how they are grouped, and how their distribution compares to other geophysical features of the planet, such as. B. the crust thickness cuts off.

This comprehensive study of Venus will help planetary scientists answer many unanswered questions about the planet’s geological history, such as why doesn’t it have plate tectonics like Earth? Has it ever been habitable and if so for how long?

Sapas Mons, a large volcano on Venus, is about 400 km in diameter. It was imaged by the Magellan spacecraft, with a light source coming from the left side of the image. (Image courtesy of JGR Planets)

This is the second major find from archival data from the Magellan mission, as just a few weeks ago scientists announced they had found evidence of recently active volcanism on Venus. The authors of this new article, graduate student Rebecca Hahn and Paul Byrne, associate professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences, both from Washington University in St. Louis, say their new map can help locate the next active lava flow on Venus , and more.

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“This paper provides researchers with an enormously valuable database for understanding volcanism on this planet – an important planetary process, but for Venus is something we know very little about despite it being a world about the size of ours.” own,” Byrne said in a press release.

It has long been known that volcanism was a large, widespread process on Venus. And even if 85,000 volcanoes on Venus sounds like a large number, Hahn said it’s probably a conservative number. She believes there are hundreds of thousands of additional geological features, some volcanic features, lurking on Venus’ surface. However, they are simply too small to have been detected by Magellan’s synthetic aperture radar (SAR).

Creating this global map was tedious work as Hahn trawled through Magellan’s radar scans of the planets. Byrne said on Twitter that this took years of work from Hahn. But she also used new technologies.

“It was tedious, but I had experience with the ArcGIS software that I used to create the map,” Hahn said. “This tool was not available when this data first became available in the 1990s. We came up with the idea of ​​compiling a global catalog because nobody has done it on this scale before.”

Image of “pancake volcanoes” in the Eistla region taken by the Magellan spacecraft. Credit: NASA/JPL

Working with the data, the researchers found that Venus hosts thousands of volcanic landforms spread across virtually the entire planet. The size of the volcanoes ranges from less than 5 km (3 miles) to well over 100 km (60 miles) in diameter. However, 99% of Venus’ volcanoes are less than 5 km (3 miles) in diameter.

“Although there are volcanoes on almost the entire surface of the planet, there appear to be relatively fewer volcanoes in the 20-100 km range [12-60 mile] Diameter range that may be a function of magma availability and eruption rate,” the researchers wrote in their paper – (which can be read online for free until early May 2023).

While Venus is almost the same size and composition as Earth, it does not have plate tectonics, so all of Venus’ internal heat is likely exiting through its volcanoes.

What is the number of volcanoes on Venus compared to Earth? There are currently about 1,350 potentially active volcanoes on Earth, but the amount beneath the ocean is not well known. We also don’t know how many volcanoes have been active throughout Earth’s history. Of course, Venus is devoid of oceans and weathering to alter the planet’s surface. But we do know that more than 80 percent of the earth’s surface – above and below sea level – is volcanic.

The new data set of Venusian volcanoes is hosted at Washington University and is publicly available to other scientists.

“We’ve already heard from colleagues that they’ve downloaded the data and are starting to analyze it – that’s what we want,” Byrne said. “Other people will ask questions that we don’t have, about volcano shape, size, distribution, timing of activity in different parts of the planet, whatever. I’m excited to see what they can find out with the new database!”

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Entertainment

Khloe Kardashian reveals her and Tristan Thompson’s son’s initials

Khloe Kardashian continues a family tradition.

The Kardashians star – who welcomed a baby boy with ex Tristan Thompson via surrogate last summer – confirmed her son has the same initial as his older sister, True Thompson, during her recent appearance on The Jennifer Hudson Show. In a preview of the episode, which will air April 5, Khloe told the host Jennifer Hudson the name “begins with a T.”

“He’s eight months old and a little hunk,” she noted. “I wouldn’t want it any other way.”

While Khloe didn’t share any other details about her baby, she explained why it had taken so long to settle on his name. “I wanted to meet him and spy on him a bit,” she explained. “First he had no name. Then he was named, but I was waiting for our show to premiere and I didn’t realize it was going to be that far out.”

The 38-year-old jokingly added, “So if my daughter comes out to me, I’m screwed.”

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Sport

Rory McIlroy has tried for 14 years, however this Masters is completely different

AUGUSTA, Ga. — AS RORY MCILROY started his pre-Masters news conference on Tuesday, he glanced to the side at a videoboard, which featured a photo of him triumphantly raising his arms after he chipped in from a bunker on the 72nd hole of the 2022 tournament.

It was the final shot of McIlroy’s latest attempt at becoming only the sixth golfer to complete the career Grand Slam in the Masters era, and although he once again fell short, he seems convinced that it was a turning point in his quest to join the most elite fraternity in the sport. It was an exclamation point on an 8-under 64 final round, which put him solo second on the leaderboard, 3 shots behind winner Scottie Scheffler.

“The only thing that I can say is that I proved to myself that I could do it,” McIlroy said. “As much as I didn’t really get into contention, there was a part of me on that back nine last year that felt that I had a chance, and to play the way I did and to eagle 13 and to have those feelings, in my mind, anyway, I felt like it was a breakthrough.”

McIlroy has won four major championships and captured victories 23 times on the PGA Tour and 15 times in Europe. He has been ranked No. 1 in the world nine times during his career, most recently just two months ago. Now ranked behind only Scheffler, he is once again among the favorites to win the Masters and add an elusive green jacket to his wardrobe.

To finally complete the career Grand Slam in his ninth attempt and end a more than eight-year drought without a major championship victory, McIlroy will have to battle more than the lightning-fast greens of Augusta National and a field that includes the best players in the world. He’ll also have to tackle the ghosts and scar tissue of past Masters failures that have plagued him.

“Not every experience is going to be a good experience,” McIlroy said. “I think that would lead to a pretty boring life. You know, you have to learn from those challenges and learn from some of that scar tissue that’s built up. I felt last year that I maybe shed some of that scar tissue and felt like I sort of made breakthroughs.”

FROM THE TIME McIlroy first showed up at Augusta National in 2009 with his floppy hair and yet-to-be-chiseled physique, the Northern Irishman seemed destined to win the Masters. With the way he smashes drives past competitors on rolling fairways, bends shots around tight corners with his natural draw and hits approach shots high into the air, Augusta National Golf Club seemed tailor-made for his game.

Rory McIlroy has been chasing a green jacket since 2009. Getty Images

Now, 14 years later, we’re still waiting for him to win.

“What does he have to do?” 1992 Masters champion Fred Couples said. “I don’t know. Is it surprising he’s never won this? Of course, it is [with] the way he plays and the way he putts and how high he hits it and how far he hits it. But it’s not that easy.”

McIlroy has come close to winning. Along with his runner-up finish last year, he finished fourth in 2015 and tied for fifth in 2018 and 2020. His chances at joining Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Ben Hogan, Gary Player and Gene Sarazen as the only players to win each of golf’s four majors were ultimately undone by one bad round at Augusta National.

“They said the same thing about Ernie Els [and] Greg Norman,” McIlroy said. “There’s been players before that that has been said. You know, this course is tailor-made for those players, and they haven’t [gone] on to win a green jacket. That’s always in my mind, too. It’s not just because a place is deemed, you know, perfectly set up for your game, it doesn’t automatically mean that you’re going to win it one day. There’s more to it than that.”

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So can one final round or shot out of a greenside bunker erase everything bad that’s happened in the past? Ben Crenshaw knows a thing or two about pain and scar tissue. Although Crenshaw won two green jackets by capturing the Masters in 1984 and 1995, he went 0-for-8 in playoffs during his PGA Tour career, including a loss to David Graham in the 1979 PGA Championship, one of his five runner-up finishes in major championships.

Standing under the iconic oak tree between the clubhouse and the first tee at Augusta National Golf Club this week, the pain still seemed fresh for the 71-year-old Texan, even all these years later.

“You always remember pain out there,” Crenshaw said. “All of us in some regard are going to feel it because we’ve all experienced it. Sometimes a bounce-back happens and it erases in your brain. It’s hard to explain how you get rid of it.”

MCILROY’S SCAR TISSUE from Augusta National is thicker than most. As a 21-year-old, he had a 4-stroke lead heading into the final round in the 2011 Masters. McIlroy seemed nervous from the start in a final pairing with the intimidating Angel Cabrera. He carded a bogey on the first hole and had to scramble from a bunker to make par on the second. He held things together and was 1-over in the round after the first nine holes.

Then, with everyone from Woods to Jason Day to Adam Scott to Charl Schwartzel trying to chase him down, McIlroy buckled under pressure. On the par-4 10th hole, he snap-hooked his tee shot into the towering pines on the left. Somehow, his ball settled in pine straw between two cabins, about 70 yards from the fairway.

21-year-old McIlroy carried a 4-stroke lead into the final round of the 2011 Masters before things took a turn. Getty Images

Three-time Masters champion Nick Faldo, working as an analyst on the CBS Sports broadcast, couldn’t believe where McIlroy’s ball ended up.

“My goodness,” Faldo said. “He must have hit a tree. That’s not much more than 150 yards off the tee.”

“I know he’s anxious to get to Butler Cabin,” CBS Sports play-by-play announcer Jim Nantz said of the cabin where the Masters champion traditionally slips on a coveted green jacket, “but it’s a little early.”

After finding his ball, McIlroy chipped out to the fairway. Then he hooked another shot with a 3-wood. He couldn’t get up and down after his fourth shot hit a tree limb and carded a triple-bogey 7. He fell from first to seventh on a crowded leaderboard.

Things would only get worse for McIlroy at Amen Corner. He three-putted for bogey on the 11th and four-putted for double bogey on the 12th. After McIlroy hooked his tee shot on the 13th into Rae’s Creek, he buried his head in his right arm with a look of defeat.

McIlroy posted an 8-over 80, the worst score for a final-round leader in the 75-year history of the tournament. He tied for 15th place at 4 under, 10 shots behind Schwartzel, the unlikely South African champion.

AFTER EMERGING FROM the clubhouse, McIlroy spoke to reporters about his forgettable round.

“Well, it’s going to be hard to take for a couple of days,” said McIlroy. “But I’ll be OK. I didn’t see it coming even though I know it’s happened before. It’s very disappointing.”

“I don’t know,” he said. “I unraveled.”

McIlroy ended the 2011 Masters tied for 15th after posting an 8-over 80, the worst score for a final-round leader in the 75-year history of the tournament. Getty Images

McIlroy later acknowledged that he cried the next day, after talking to his mother, Rosie, on the telephone. She tried to assure him that everything was going to be OK, but he wasn’t so sure.

“It was one of those things,” McIlroy told the Guardian in December 2011. “There were so many thoughts and emotions going through my head. At the time it felt like the only chance I would have of winning at Augusta and I blew it.

“It could have been the crossroads of my career,” he said. “I could have done what I did on Sunday at Augusta and let it affect me and let it get to me, and maybe go into a slump or feel down or feel sorry for myself.”

McIlroy came out on the right side in the end. While there were concerns that McIlroy would never get over his collapse at the Masters, he claimed his first major championship about two months later when he won the 2011 U.S. Open at Congressional Country Club by 8 strokes, setting records for the lowest 72-hole total (268) and lowest score under par (16 under). He added PGA Championship titles in 2012 and 2014 and the Open Championship at Royal Liverpool in 2014.

McIlroy put on a show at the 2011 U.S. Open, winning his first major title by 8 strokes. Getty Images

“If anything, it made me more determined to go back and prove to a lot of people, not just the media but everyone, and prove to myself as well that I wasn’t this person they were making me out to be in the press — a choker [who] can’t handle the pressure,” McIlroy said in 2011. “I was determined to show them that that wasn’t me.”

AND YET, WINNING a green jacket remains elusive. At 33 years old, time is still on McIlroy’s side. But with each passing year, the pressure to win the Masters only gets greater. Ahead of the 2017 Masters, McIlroy told Golf Digest that the stress from wanting to win a green jacket made it difficult for others to be around him before the tournament.

“I am, ask anyone who knows me, a complete p—k in the week leading up to Augusta,” McIlroy said. “But they understand and know that. It’s a stressful situation.”

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McIlroy said Tuesday that he’s been working with renowned sports psychologist Bob Rotella, who has written a dozen books about golf and psychology. Rotella, a former director of sports psychology at the University of Virginia, has a simple philosophy when it comes to what golfers should be thinking about in their pre-shot routines.

In his 2004 book, “The Golfer’s Mind,” Rotella wrote that people have been programmed to remember bad things that have happened since they were young. In the fourth grade, for example, teachers mark incorrect answers on a test with a red marker but leave the correct ones alone. Golfers remember their bad shots, but not their good ones. Mark Twain famously said that “the inability to forget is infinitely more devastating than the inability to remember.”

“Ideally, a golfer would remember eternally his best shots,” Rotella wrote. “When he confronted a difficult tee shot, or a lob from a tight lie, or a slippery putt, he’d recollect all the great shots he’d hit in similar situations in the past. He’d step up to the ball confidently, and this confidence would greatly enhance the chance that he’d hit another great shot. Unfortunately, too many of us have the opposite tendency. We remember our bad shots, and we forget our good ones.”

McIlroy planned to meet with Rotella in Augusta on Tuesday night.

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“I think the best way for me to feel like I’m in a good headspace is to be as prepared as I possibly can be, and I feel really prepared,” McIlroy said. ” I think when you feel that way and you feel like you’ve done everything that you need to do, you sort of just get into a different level of comfort. I think I’m pretty much there.”

When McIlroy was asked whether his problems at Augusta National were more physical or mental, he said, “I would say the majority of mental or emotional struggles rather than physical. I’ve always felt like I have the physical ability to win this tournament. But it’s being in the right headspace to let those physical abilities shine through.”

“It’s been tentative starts, not putting my foot on the gas early enough,” McIlroy said. “I’ve had a couple of bad nine holes that have sort of thrown me out of the tournament at times. So it’s sort of just like I’ve got all the ingredients to make the pie. It’s just putting all those ingredients in and setting the oven to the right temperature and letting it all sort of come to fruition. But I know that I’ve got everything there. It’s just a matter of putting it all together.”

AFTER MAKING ADJUSTMENTS with his driver and changing putters before the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play last month, McIlroy’s game is in pretty good form. He has won three times since August, including the season-ending Tour Championship at East Lake.

McIlroy hasn’t won a major since he hoisted the Wanamaker Trophy for a second time as the PGA Championship winner at Valhalla in August 2014. There have been plenty of near-misses, including a tie for fifth at the U.S. Open and a solo third at the 150th Open Championship at St. Andrews last year. After having the lead or a co-lead at the end of rounds 17 times in his first 25 major championships, McIlroy didn’t hold a lead again in the next 30 until the final round of The Open in August. He shot a 2-under 70 over the final 18 holes and lost to Australia’s Cameron Smith by 2 strokes.

A third-place finish at the 150th Open Championship at St. Andrews last year was all too familiar territory for McIlroy. Getty Images

It was an all-too-familiar feeling for McIlroy. Since his last victory at Valhalla, there have been 31 majors played, which were won by 23 different golfers — but not him. It was the 17th time McIlroy had finished in the top 10 in a major, the most by any player since 2015, according to ESPN Stats & Information. He has finished in the top five nine times in majors, including in three of four last season.

“I’m only human. I’m not a robot,” McIlroy said at St. Andrews last year. “Of course you think about it, and you envision it, and you want to envision it. … And every time I go out, I’m trying to envision McIlroy at the top name on that leaderboard and how did that feel?

“I’ll be OK,” McIlroy said. “At the end of the day, it’s not life or death. I’ll have other chances to win the Open Championship and other chances to win majors.”

GIVEN THAT MCILROY has become a statesman of sorts for the PGA Tour during its ongoing battle with the LIV Golf League, the timing would be right for him to complete the career Grand Slam. McIlroy has sparred with Norman, the LIV Golf CEO, and had a dust-up with LIV Golf player Patrick Reed, a former Masters champion, at the Dubai Desert Classic in January. McIlroy and Woods were instrumental in reshaping the PGA Tour after several of its members, including major championship winners Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Sergio Garcia, Brooks Koepka and others, left for the LIV Golf League.

Starting at the JP McManus Pro-Am in Ireland in July, McIlroy and others began restructuring the PGA Tour to ensure that its top stars would be competing against each other more often — and for a lot more money. Woods and McIlroy led a meeting of the tour’s top players during the FedEx Cup playoffs in Wilmington, Delaware, in August, which led to many changes that were announced earlier this year. McIlroy’s role has opened him to criticism from lesser-ranked PGA Tour members, who are worried they’ll be left out of designated events with bigger purses.

“The thing that’s been so impressive about what he’s done and having seen where we were coming out of Delaware last year to where we are now, his leadership has manifested itself in a way where he has a very good grasp on and balance on the full picture and on the entire membership, and where we were last summer to where we are now is largely a reflection on the amount of time and energy he’s put into understanding that,” PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said.

After missing the cut at the Players Championship last month, McIlroy said he was “ready to get back to being purely a golfer.”

McIlroy and Tiger Woods were crucial in reshaping the PGA Tour after a number of its members defected to LIV Golf. Getty Images

If McIlroy can figure out how to win at Augusta National Golf Club this week, he’ll be firmly among the game’s greatest players.

“Rory has the talent,” Woods said. “He has the game. He has all the tools to win here. It’s just a matter of time. A lot of things have to happen to win at this golf course. A lot of things have to go right. I think Rory has shown over the years he’s learned how to play this golf course, and you just have to understand how to play it.

“He’s been there. Last year he made a great run [and] put himself there. But I think that it’s just a matter of time, whether it’s this year or next or whenever it comes, he will get it done, and he will have a career Grand Slam. It’s just what year it will be; it will definitely happen.”

Categories
Technology

Swedish startup presents first “origami” e-motorcycle – and prices 15,000 euros

What do you get when you mix motorcycles with origami? The answer, dear reader, is the Stilride 1.

The unique vehicle is the brainchild of Swedish startup Stilride. The company today unveiled the final design and price for the new electric vehicle, which is expected to hit the market in 2024.

For 15,000 euros, each customer receives a tailor-made motorcycle that combines looks, performance and sustainability.

To create each vehicle, Stilride uses a groundbreaking method called “industrial origami,” which uses the Japanese art of folding paper onto tin. The startup’s software first defines the geometries, which are then brought to life by industrial robots and laser cutting.

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With the Stilride 1, a single stainless steel sheet is required for the entire process. Since it is folded instead of welded, there are minimal pollutants. In order to further minimize the environmental impact, the bike is produced locally from a few parts. It’s also lightweight, which reduces energy consumption.

“It was developed for motorcycle fans as well as for design and sustainability purists.

Tue Beijer, CTO and co-founder of Stilride, wants the bike to set “a new gold standard” for electric mobility.

“The Stilride 1 is the culmination of years of ambition, passion and experimentation, distilled into a deliciously unconventional, lightweight electric motorcycle that is not just a technical feat, but a work of art,” Beijer said in a statement. “It was developed for motorcycle fans as well as for design and sustainability purists.”

But does it pass the eye test? You can see it for yourself in the gallery below:

The aesthetic modernizes the previous design, which my colleague Ioanna likened to “an origami duck.” In my eyes, the new model looks more like the steel love child of a Vespa and an electric guitar.

Regardless, looks aren’t everything on the road. In terms of specs, the Stilride 1 features an ultra-light chassis made from recycled Swedish steel, a top-of-the-line HUB motor system, a single shock absorber and multi-link rear suspension, and a braking system co-developed with ISR.

There’s also a compelling connectivity system. The motorcycle’s Electric Vehicle Control Unit (eVCU) operates various functions via the Stilcontrol app, which provides anti-theft protection, geographic positioning, service diagnostics and battery status control.

More technical details can be found in the image below:

The bikes will be built at Stilride’s pilot production facility in Stockholm.

The specs and price are certainly eye-catching – but will they convince you to spend your hard-earned cash? Let us know through the usual channels.

If you answer yes, the launch date for the Stilride 1 will be announced this summer. And If you are interested in early access, you can get more information on Stilride’s website.

Categories
Science

Der kalifornische Gouverneur Newsom lässt die Gaspreise noch weiter steigen! – Watt damit?

Gast „Du kannst Dummheiten nicht reparieren“ von David Middleton

Ich könnte diese Art von Schiefer nicht herstellen, selbst wenn ich es versuchen würde …

Gouverneur Newsom unterzeichnet Gesetz zur Senkung des Gaspreises: „Kalifornien nahm es mit Big Oil auf und gewann“

Veröffentlicht: 28. März 2023

WAS DU WISSEN MUSST: Nach rekordverdächtigen Gaspreiserhöhungen und Gewinnen unterzeichnete Gouverneur Newsom sein Sondersitzungsgesetz, um Big Oil zur Rechenschaft zu ziehen – die jüngste Maßnahme, die der Gouverneur ergriffen hat, um die Branche zu zügeln.

SACRAMENTO – Heute unterzeichnete Gouverneur Gavin Newsom, umgeben von Gesetzgebern und Gemeindevorstehern in der Rotunde des California State Capitol, ein Gesetz zur Umsetzung der strengsten Aufsichts- und Rechenschaftspflichtmaßnahmen auf staatlicher Ebene für Big Oil in der Nation – und brachte Transparenz in die kalifornische Öl- und Gasindustrie , die ein neues Licht auf die Unternehmen werfen, die jahrzehntelang im Schatten operiert haben, während sie Familien abgezockt und Rekordgewinne eingestrichen haben.

Es ist der jüngste Fall, in dem der Gouverneur erfolgreich gegen die historisch mächtige Industrie vorgegangen ist, um Profite über Menschen zu stellen. Im vergangenen Jahr unterzeichnete Gouverneur Newsom ein Gesetz, das neue Meldepflichten für Ölraffinerien hinzufügt, sowie ein Gesetz, das Nachbarschaften und Schulen vor Ölbohrungen schützt.

[…]

Lesen Sie hier mehr Unsinn: Büro von Gouverneur Gavin Newsom

Bevor er „Big Oil“ verleumdete, hätte Gouverneur Newsom vielleicht bei AAA nachfragen können …

https://gaspreise.aaa.com/ https://gaspreise.aaa.com/

Verzichten ExxonMobil, Chevron und der Rest von „Big Oil“ auf Gewinne in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama und Tennessee, um die Volksrepublik Kalifornien auszuhöhlen? Bringt eine ganz neue Bedeutung von Red States vs. Blue States.

Es ist nichts Neues, dass die Gaspreise an der Westküste höher sind als im Rest dieser Vereinigten Staaten… Beachten Sie das Datum des folgenden Artikels:

Die Gaspreise an der Westküste sind die schlechtesten der Nation

Von ABC News

WASHINGTON, 25. April 2001 — Autofahrer an der Westküste zahlen Jahr für Jahr mehr an der Zapfsäule als anderswo im Land. Es gibt viele Gründe für die himmelhohen Gaspreise in der Region, aber keine einfachen Lösungen.

[…]

Warum die Diskrepanz?

„Kalifornien ist der drittgrößte Benzinverbraucher der Welt – nur hinter dem Rest der Vereinigten Staaten und Japan“, sagte Jim Wells, Direktor der Abteilung für natürliche Ressourcen und Umwelt des GAO, vor einem Unterausschuss des Senats.

Raffinerien in Kalifornien sind nahezu voll ausgelastet, um die hohe Nachfrage nach Gas im Bundesstaat zu decken, aber Kalifornien liefert auch Treibstoff an westliche Bundesstaaten wie Oregon – das keine einzige eigene Raffinerie hat – Arizona und Nevada. Und hohe Nachfrage sorgt für hohe Preise.

Ohne eine einzige Ölpipeline, die die Rocky Mountains durchquert, ist die Westküste praktisch von der restlichen Gasversorgung des Landes abgeschnitten, was die Region extrem anfällig für plötzliche Gasknappheit und die daraus resultierenden starken Preissteigerungen macht.

„Der Benzinmarkt an der Westküste ist von Benzinquellen außerhalb der Bundesstaaten isoliert, so dass Versorgungsengpässe nicht einfach ersetzt werden können“, sagte Wells und merkte an, dass der Transport von Gas von außerhalb der Bundesstaaten auf Tankwagen ein langsames und sehr kostspieliges Unterfangen sei.

[…]

„Saubereres“ Gas und höhere Steuern

Ein weiterer großer Teil des Preisproblems könnte Kaliforniens Eigenproduktion sein: Der Staat verwendet seine eigene spezielle Art von Benzin.

[…]

In den letzten zwei Jahrzehnten wurde fast die Hälfte der kalifornischen Raffinerien geschlossen. Und seit den 1970er Jahren wurden in Kalifornien oder anderswo in den Vereinigten Staaten keine neuen Raffinerien gebaut.

Die Ölindustrie macht strenge staatliche Vorschriften und den starken Widerstand lokaler Gemeinden für den Mangel an neuen Raffinerien verantwortlich.

[…]

abc Nachrichten

Was hat sich seit 2001 geändert? Wenig.

Durch den Ausbau bestehender Raffinerien hat sich die gesamte US-Raffineriekapazität seit 2001 um etwa 1,4 Millionen Barrel pro Tag (bbl/d) erhöht.

Die Kapazität an der Westküste (PADD 5) ist jedoch tatsächlich um etwa 500.000 Barrel pro Tag zurückgegangen, und das gesamte in Kalifornien verbrauchte Benzin wird in PADD 5 raffiniert.

Im Jahr 2001 produzierte Kalifornien (714 mbbl/d) fast so viel Rohöl wie Texas (1.162 mbbl/d). Seitdem ist die kalifornische Produktion auf 335 mbbl/d gesunken, während Texas (/sarc) auf 5.043 mbbl/d gestiegen ist (kann man „Permian Basin“ sagen?).

„Ohne eine einzige Ölpipeline, die die Rocky Mountains durchschneidet …“

„So wie es immer war“… API

Kalifornien hat eine der höchsten Benzinsteuern der Nation … 0,8655 $/gal (einschließlich Bundessteuern). In Texas beträgt die All-in-Steuer nur 0,384 $/gal.

Es gibt auch Kaliforniens einzigartige, umweltfreundliche Benzinmischung … Gouverneur Newsom hätte sich einfach bei der kalifornischen Energiekommission erkundigen können.

Was treibt die Benzinpreise in Kalifornien an?

September 2022

Benzinpreisänderungen in Kalifornien werden in erster Linie durch die Kosten des globalen Rohöls und erhebliche ungeplante Raffinerieausfälle verursacht. Derzeit führt die russische Invasion in der Ukraine dazu, dass die Rohölpreise steigen und volatil bleiben. Die Benzinpreise sind sehr sensibel, sodass sich bei jeder Verschiebung von Angebot und Nachfrage der Preis ändert, den Sie an der Zapfsäule bezahlen.

Das Tanken in Kalifornien kostet auch mehr, da die Benzinpreise aus mehreren Gründen im Durchschnitt höher sind als im Rest der Vereinigten Staaten. Zu diesen Gründen gehören die isolierte Natur des staatlichen Kraftstoffmarktes, ein spezielles Benzinrezept, das die Luftverschmutzung, Umweltprogrammkosten und Steuern reduziert.

Ein isolierter Markt

Der kalifornische Kraftstoffmarkt ist isoliert, was bedeutet, dass in Kalifornien gekauftes Benzin auch im Bundesstaat raffiniert wird. Ölraffinerien und Kraftstoffverteilungszentren sind durch Zeit und Entfernung von alternativen Quellen isoliert, um bei ungeplanten Raffinerieausfällen Nachschub zu leisten. Preisspitzen können für Kalifornier länger anhalten, da die Kosten höher sind und die Wiederversorgungszeit länger ist.

[…]

Kalifornische Energiekommission

„Ein isolierter Markt“, abhängig von importiertem ausländischem Rohöl und einer Handvoll veralteter Raffinerien, die in der denkbar industriefeindlichsten Umgebung operieren. Also, ja, wenn eine Raffinerie in Kalifornien vom Netz gehen muss, ist das ein großer Fracking-Deal für die Kalifornier. Earth to Gov. Newsom: Alle Raffinerien müssen gelegentlich offline gehen.

Selbst wenn er zu faul und/oder dumm ist, den Artikel zu lesen, hätte er sich die Bilder ansehen können.

Reichlich Ressourcen, reichlich dumme Politiker

Petroleum

Ausländische Anbieter liefern fast die Hälfte des in Kalifornien raffinierten Rohöls.

Kalifornien verfügt über etwa 4 % der gesamten Rohölreserven des Landes und ist der siebtgrößte Rohölproduzent unter den Bundesstaaten.86,87 Stauseen entlang der kalifornischen Pazifikküste, einschließlich im Becken von Los Angeles, und im Central Valley des Bundesstaates enthalten große Erdölreserven. Das ergiebigste Rohölfördergebiet des Bundesstaates ist das San-Joaquin-Becken in der südlichen Hälfte des kalifornischen Central Valley.88,89 Obwohl die Rohölproduktion Kaliforniens seit 1985 stetig zurückgegangen ist, produzierte der Bundesstaat im Jahr 2021 fast 131 Millionen Barrel Rohöl.90

Bewertungen der kalifornischen Offshore-Gebiete weisen auf das Potenzial für große, unentdeckte förderbare Rohölressourcen im staatlich verwalteten Äußeren Festlandsockel (OCS) hin dauerhaftes Moratorium für Offshore-Öl- und Erdgas-Leasing in staatlichen Gewässern.92 Der Kongress verhängte 1982 ein bundesweites Moratorium für Öl- und Erdgas-Leasing in kalifornischen Bundesgewässern. Das bundesweite Moratorium lief 2008 aus.93 Seitdem wurden jedoch keine kalifornischen Offshore-Bundes-Leasingverträge mehr verkauft und Präsident Biden unterzeichnete im Januar 2021 eine Durchführungsverordnung, die das neue Öl- und Erdgas-Leasing auf bundesstaatlichem öffentlichem Land und in Offshore-Gewässern aussetzt.94,95 Es gibt 22 ältere Erdöl- und Erdgasförderplattformen, die in Bundesgewässern und 11 in Bundesstaaten aktiv bleiben Gewässer vor der Küste von California.96,97

Kalifornien verfügt über etwa ein Zehntel der gesamten Rohölraffinationskapazität des Landes und liegt an dritter Stelle nach Texas und Louisiana.98 Ein Netz von Pipelines verbindet die kalifornische Rohölproduktion mit den 14 betriebsbereiten Raffinerien des Staates, die sich hauptsächlich in der Gegend von Los Angeles befinden San Francisco Bay Area und das San Joaquin Valley.99.100 kalifornische Raffinerien verarbeiten auch große Mengen an ausländischem und alaskischem Rohöl. Als die Rohölproduktion in Kalifornien und Alaska zurückging, erhöhten die Raffinerien des Staates ihr Angebot aus ausländischen Importen.101,102 Angeführt von Ecuador, Saudi-Arabien, dem Irak und Kolumbien lieferten ausländische Lieferanten im Jahr 2020 fast die Hälfte des in Kalifornien raffinierten Rohöls.103,104

Kalifornien verlangt, dass alle Autofahrer im Rahmen eines Gesamtprogramms zur Reduzierung der Emissionen von Kraftfahrzeugen mindestens eine bestimmte Benzinmischung namens CaRFG (California Reformulated Benzin) verwenden. Kalifornische Raffinerien produzieren sauberere Kraftstoffe, um die staatlichen Umweltvorschriften zu erfüllen.105 Aufgrund der hohen Nachfrage nach diesen Erdölprodukten und des Mangels an zwischenstaatlichen Pipelines, die sie in den Staat liefern können, arbeiten Raffinerien im Bundesstaat oft an oder nahe der Kapazitätsgrenze. Wenn es zu ungeplanten Raffinerieausfällen kommt, bedeutet der Mangel an CaRFG-Lieferungen, die über zwischenstaatliche Pipelines verfügbar sind, dass Ersatzlieferungen von CaRFG durch Seetanker von Raffinerien außerhalb der USA oder aus anderen Ländern ankommen. Es kann mehrere Wochen dauern, Ersatzmotorbenzin aus Übersee zu finden und mitzubringen, das den einzigartigen Spezifikationen Kaliforniens entspricht.106

Kalifornien ist nach Texas der landesweit zweitgrößte Verbraucher von raffinierten Erdölprodukten und macht etwa 9 % des US-Gesamtverbrauchs aus.107 Im Jahr 2020 war Kalifornien der landesweit größte Verbraucher von Kerosin und der zweitgrößte Verbraucher von Motorbenzin. nach Texas.108,109 Der Transportsektor verbraucht etwa 85 % des im Bundesstaat verbrauchten Erdöls. Der Industriesektor macht etwa 12 % des staatlichen Erdölverbrauchs aus. Der gewerbliche Sektor verbraucht etwa 2 % und der Wohnsektor weniger als 1 %.110 Nur etwa 1 von 30 kalifornischen Haushalten heizt mit Erdölprodukten, und die meisten von ihnen verwenden flüssige Kohlenwasserstoffgase (HGL) wie Propan.111

UVP

  • Kalifornien verfügt über ein reichhaltiges Öl- und Gasressourcenpotenzial, sowohl an Land als auch vor der Küste. Politiker wie Gouverneur Newsom versuchen aggressiv, die Ausbeutung dieser Ressourcen zu verhindern.
  • Kalifornien erfordert eine sehr spezifische Benzinmischung, die innerhalb des Staates raffiniert werden muss. Politiker wie Gouverneur Newsom stehen den Unternehmen, die diese Raffinerien betreiben, offen feindlich gegenüber.
  • Kalifornien ist der zweitgrößte Benzinverbraucher in der erdölproduzierenden Nation der Welt. Politiker wie Gouverneur Newsom haben ein Umfeld geschaffen, in dem der größte Staat der erdölproduzierenden Nation Nr. 1 56 % seines Rohöls aus dem Ausland importieren muss.
  • „California Took on Big Oil and Won“ – Kalifornien gibt „Big Oil“ die Schuld und verabschiedet weitere Belästigungsgesetze, die den kalifornischen Verbrauchern nur mehr Geld kosten werden.

Gouverneur Belästigung … “Hier ist Ihr Zeichen”

Vorgestellte Bildquelle

https://babylonbee.com/news/gavin-newsom-named-u-haul-salesperson-of-the-year

Gavin Newsom zum U-Haul-Verkäufer des Jahres ernannt

USA · 15. September 2021 · BabylonBee.com

SACRAMENTO, CA – U-Haul hat Gouverneur Gavin Newsom nach einem rekordverdächtigen Verkaufsquartal zum dritten Mal in Folge zum Verkäufer des Jahres ernannt.

„Wir sind erstaunt über das Wachstum, das wir in Kalifornien beobachten konnten“, sagte Fennick Buggstein, Regionaldirektor West von U-Haul. „Dank Gavin Newsom ist buchstäblich jede bürgerliche Familie aus dem Staat weggezogen! Es war unmöglich, mit der Nachfrage Schritt zu halten! Außerdem haben die meisten unserer Arbeiter den Staat auch verlassen, was irgendwie stinkt.“

[…]

Die Babylon-Biene

So was:

Wie Wird geladen…

Categories
Health

J&J pays $8.9 billion for most cancers therapies with beauty talc merchandise

Containers of Johnson’s baby powder, manufactured by Johnson and Johnson, are displayed on a shelf July 13, 2018 in San Francisco, California.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

Johnson&Johnson on Tuesday said it would pay $8.9 billion over the next 25 years to settle allegations that the company’s baby powder and other talc products caused cancer.

The company disclosed the proposed settlement in a securities filing. J&J’s subsidiary, LTL Management, also filed again for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after its first attempt was thwarted, the filing said.

More than 60,000 applicants have pledged to support the proposed order, which would require bankruptcy court approval, the filing added.

“Resolving this matter through the proposed reorganization plan is both fairer and more efficient, allows for timely compensation for beneficiaries and allows the company to remain focused on our commitment to make a profound and positive impact on the health of humanity,” said Erik Haas , J&J’s global vice president of litigation, in a statement.

But J&J still pushed back on the Talk allegations.

“The Company continues to believe these claims are flimsy and lack scientific merit,” Haas added.

The company ended sales of its talc-based baby powder worldwide this year after facing thousands of lawsuits from customers claiming that its talc products caused cancer due to contamination with the cancer-causing asbestos.

J&J spun off LTL management in October 2021 to reduce its litigation and settlement losses. The company escalated its Talk claims to the subsidiary and promptly filed for bankruptcy protection.

A judge confirmed J&J’s ability to employ the Chapter 11 strategy in February 2022.

But the US Circuit Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit reversed the ruling in January this year, saying neither LTL nor J&J had a legitimate need for bankruptcy protection because they were not in “financial distress.”

Leigh O’Dell, one of the lead attorneys representing the plaintiffs in the Talk lawsuits, told CNBC at the time that the ruling was another step toward ending J&J’s “attempted abuse of the bankruptcy system.”

O’Dell said in a statement to CNBC on Tuesday that J&J “is aiming for an extremely high discount on equity and isn’t really offering anything other than another bankruptcy and more delay, delay and delay.”

“This new motion should be viewed as a shameful attempt to shorten the time for people dying of cancer and to convince some advocates to give up,” she said.

Mikal Watts, one of the plaintiffs’ attorneys who negotiated the proposed settlement, said J&J was committed to “fairly compensate these deserving women” who have battled cancer as a result of the talc products. “Our job is to get our customers paid fairly for their injuries, and this settlement is the culmination of a job well done.”

J&J said last month it would take the case to the Supreme Court.

The company paid $7.4 billion in legal costs between 2020 and 2021, according to an annual filing. The company said Talk litigation has been a top source of legal costs over those years.