Lamar Jackson’s situation, Eagles do right by Jalen Hurts and more

The Baltimore Ravens began their OTAs last week, but star quarterback Lamar Jackson was absent. Nobody is talking, and it’s getting weird.

Lamar Jackson’s words say one thing. His actions say otherwise.

Last week, the Baltimore Ravens opened their season with voluntary OTAs. Jackson wasn’t in attendance, only one of two quarterbacks around the NFL not present. The other was Kyler Murray of the Arizona Cardinals, who has been public in his discontent with the organization throughout the offseason.

However, unlike Murray, Jackson’s team has repeatedly attempted to engage him in extension talks this winter. No dice.

Entering the final year of his rookie deal, the Heisman Trophy winner and unanimous 2019 MVP hasn’t returned the urgency of general manager Eric DeCosta, something the team made clear at the Owner’s Meetings in late March.

“Unless he has a change of heart, calls Eric and says ‘I’m ready,”’ said team owner Steve Bisciotti, via the team’s website. “Eric can’t keep calling him and going, ‘Hey Lamar, you really need to get in here and get this thing done.’ It’s not a GM’s job.

“Eric can structure contracts any way he wants. I think we’re a pretty aggressive team and when Lamar’s ready…we’ll pay him when he’s ready.”

Still, Jackson doesn’t appear ready to negotiate. And considering Jackson represents himself, it presents a tricky situation for DeCosta, who doesn’t have an agent to work with as an intermediary.

Jackson, who has publicly stated both his love for the franchise and his displeasure with the trade of receiver Hollywood Brown in recent months, took a moment Friday to tweet he isn’t at OTAs because he doesn’t need to be, but stated “I will be there, just not on your watch,” in response to criticism from NBC Sports’ Chris Simms.

While Jackson’s words say he is committed to Baltimore going forward, his actions are of a man either conflicted on the future, or one who doesn’t believe it’s in Charm City. And for the Ravens, every passing day without Jackson signed long-term creates potential cap issues as planning becomes difficult.

“They have to give themselves some other options,” a former NFL general manager told FanSided. “If they love the backup, that’s one thing but I’m not sure that’s their best answer. I would’ve drafted one that I felt really good about in the second or third round. Maybe they didn’t like any of them, I don’t know.

“The worst deals I ever made as a GM were the ones that I struggled to communicate with the other side on — or had no options. I have never thought hope was a real plan.”

At this juncture, DeCosta has two options. He can play out 2022 as is, and then place the franchise tag on Jackson, knowing he can do the same come the following year. Or, DeCosta can continue trying to work out an extension, and if he fails, start seriously considering drafting a quarterback in what is expected to be a loaded ’23 rookie class before trading Jackson for one of the biggest hauls in league history.

And for Baltimore, maybe the second option is becoming increasingly appealing.

The Ravens have enjoyed immense regular-season success with Jackson, but their limited passing game has hurt them in three consecutive playoff losses from 2018-20. While Jackson has steadily improved, DeCosta must weigh paying Jackson $45+ million annually, or finding another quarterback who will be cheap for four years and can produce similar win totals. Not easy, but appealing.

Ultimately, if Jackson won’t sit at the bargaining table, DeCosta may feel he has little choice.

Smart money still says the sides get a deal done. Baltimore clearly wants Jackson, and although he’s been aloof in negotiations to this point, Jackson continues to publicly state his love for the Ravens. Furthermore, if DeCosta wants, he can control Jackson’s movement for the next three years, albeit at a massive cap number in ’23 and ’24.

As for Jackson, he has to assess risk. With this being the final year of his rookie deal, one serious injury and suddenly he loses what could literally be hundreds of millions. We’ve seen men like Kirk Cousins play out the tag, and that was risky, but it’s meager compared to what Jackson would be losing.

For the Ravens, and Jackson, the safe move is signing.

But so far, Jackson’s words have gone much further than his actions, and the Ravens have to be worried.

Power rankings

Top 10 Offensive Rookie of the Year candidates

1. Chris Olave, WR, New Orleans Saints – Deep threat, big-armed QB
2. Treylon Burks, WR, Tennessee Titans – Tons of opportunity with A.J. Brown gone
3. Kenny Pickett, QB, Pittsburgh Steelers – Only rookie QB who is likely to start
4. Breece Hall, RB, New York Jets – Excellent talent, top rookie RB taken, opportunity
5. Skyy Moore, WR, Kansas City Chiefs – Patrick Mahomes, great system for big numbers
6. Garrett Wilson, WR, New York Jets – Might be top target for Zach Wilson
7. Alec Pierce, WR, Indianapolis Colts – Opportunity as No. 2 receiver, Matt Ryan
8. Christian Watson, WR, Green Bay Packers – Aaron Rodgers, no clear top target
9. Jameson Williams, WR, Detroit Lions – Can Williams get healthy for enough games?
10. James Cook, RB, Buffalo Bills – Carries, great offense, light boxes

Quotable

“He has the total package. Just being around him for the past week and seeing some of the things he can do, he has all the tools. He’s very gifted. It’s about applying it, taking the stuff he learns in the classroom, taking it to the field. He has the tools. It’s about refining those tools. And it takes time.”

– Green Bay Packers’ Randall Cobb on fellow receiver and rookie Christian Watson

The handwringing surrounding Green Bay’s lack of weaponry is overblown, considering the two-time reigning MVP is playing quarterback in Titletown. However, if the Packers don’t get much from Watson in his rookie year, it’s a fair question to ask what Green Bay will do on third down and in the red zone against quality defenses.

If the youngster can perform immediately, that’s where he’ll have his biggest impact.

Podcast

Random stat

Joe Gibbs is the only head coach in NFL history to win the Super Bowl with three different starting quarterbacks, doing so with Washington in 1982 (Joe Theismann), ’87 (Doug Williams and ’91 (Mark Rypien).

Info learned this week

1. Deshaun Watson situation continues to build for NFL, Browns

Another week, and more speculation about the future of Deshaun Watson.

Watson, who still faces 22 civil suits from women in Texas alleging sexual misconduct, has yet to be suspended by the NFL. While rumors swirl about when discipline could be handed down — and the amount of it we’ll see — Tuesday brought more to light with HBO’s Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel airing interviews with some of Watson’s accusers.

While the commentary didn’t bring new bombshells, it reinforced the heinous nature of what Watson allegedly did. And although all 10 criminal complaints have been dismissed by a pair of Texas grand juries, the NFL still has the ability to ban Watson for whatever duration it believes appropriate.

Eventually, commissioner Roger Goodell must decide whether to wait for all the civil suits to be settled, or to act soon. If it’s the former, Watson could well play the entire 2022 season. If it’s the latter — which Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer predicts — it makes sense to move before training camp, allowing the league to shift the conversation from rampant speculation to a final decision.

2. It’s been a big week of health for AFC East quarterbacks

Mac Jones and Zach Wilson. Ready for both the beach and their sophomore seasons.

Last week, there was ample talk about both of them getting into better shape. For Wilson, the New York Jets’ signal-caller says he’s up to 221 pounds through elimination of added sugars, putting on healthy weight. Wilson was 208 pounds as a rookie, and hopes to be 218 once the season starts. As a more slender quarterback, it’s a wise move for the former BYU star to bulk up.

Meanwhile, the New England Patriots are also seeing less of Mac Jones. Literally.

Jones has cut down the belly fat after his rookie campaign and entered OTAs at 214 pounds. While he was able to stay healthy and play all 17 games for New England in 2021, the increased nutrition could pay off in terms of avoiding a late-season downturn, as happened a year ago.

For both Wilson and Jones, it shows the willingness to be serious about the non-football portions of a career which often extend the lifespan of a player. Good signs for each team.

3. Steelers make smart, predictable move in hiring Omar Khan

Nobody is more consistent in their processes than the Pittsburgh Steelers.

On Wednesday, Pittsburgh hired internal candidate Omar Khan to replace long-time general manager Kevin Colbert, who retired this offseason. Khan has been with the club since 2001 and working as Colbert’s right-hand man since the ’16 season.

For Pittsburgh, this was the easy choice. No team loves continuity more than the Steelers, who famously have had only three head coaches since 1969. In the front office, there’s also been little change, and Khan’s elevation in light of Colbert’s departure stays with that line of thinking.

While so many franchises are constantly flailing and changing course, Pittsburgh never does. It has served the Steelers well, with six Super Bowl titles and 30 playoff appearances over the past 49 seasons.

4. Raiders work out Colin Kaepernick for backup role

Colin Kaepernick hasn’t thrown an NFL pass since 2016. Could that soon be changing?

For the first time since being blackballed for his social justice stance, Kaepernick worked out with an NFL team. Last week, the Las Vegas Raiders gave him a look. In theory, if he’s better than current backup Jarrett Stidham, he should be signed. However, despite positive reviews, Kaepernick hasn’t gotten a deal from Las Vegas yet.

Although Kaepernick hasn’t had any opportunities since ’16, it’s hard to argue he’s not worth a backup spot. Forget the politics for a minute. Kaepernick was a decent starter who went 28-30 as a starter, completing 59.8 percent of his attempts with 72 touchdowns against 30 interceptions. To argue he’s a quality starter is asinine and biased, but it’s the same thing to say he’s not better than most current backups in the league.

The Raiders got a good view. Perhaps it’s finally his door back, but so far, that door hasn’t opened.

5. Deion Jones hurt, and the Falcons already dealing with issues

With the Atlanta Falcons starting OTAs, one prominent face wasn’t there.

Linebacker Deion Jones is going to miss the remainder of the offseason program following shoulder surgery. This means sidelining one of the Falcons’ top-five players, albeit with the hope Jones is back in time for a good chunk of training camp and the regular season.

If the Falcons are going to compete at all in 2022, they need some luck. The offense is barren save for tight end Kyle Pitts and rookie receiver Drake London, while the defense is largely Jones and star corner A.J. Terrell. Outside of those names and a few veterans such as tackle Jake Matthews and defensive lineman Grady Jarrett, it’s one of the NFL’s weakest rosters.

And for Jones, this is a contract year, even with his current deal running through 2023. If Jones struggles, the Falcons can release him for a cap savings of $13.1 million while, only eating $5.3million in dead cap.

Two cents

If any one unit can swing a playoff race this autumn, it’s the Miami Dolphins’ offense.

Miami spent gobs of money and draft capital this offseason, signing guard Connor Williams, left tackle Terron Armstead and running back Raheem Mostert. The Dolphins also made a blockbuster trade to land receiver Tyreek Hill from the Chiefs, sending back five picks over the 2022 and ’23 drafts.

All of this is a major push under first-year head coach Mike McDaniel to win a playoff game for the first time since 2000. And whether the draught finally ends is largely on McDaniel and quarterback Tua Tagovailoa.

For two years, Tagovailoa dealt with horrid offensive lines and only one top-tier weapon in last year’s rookie sensation, Jaylen Waddle. Now, Tagovailoa is supported by better protection, Hill and Waddle, a speedy backfield led by Mostert and sure-handed tight end Mike Gesicki.

If Tagovailoa takes a major step forward, the Dolphins can challenge for a playoff berth in the loaded AFC. If not, Miami will once again be an afterthought.

Inside the league

Nobody has had a better offseason than Jalen Hurts.

The Philadelphia Eagles surprised many last season by winning nine games and earning a wild card spot, before being handled by the Buccaneers in the opening round.

However, the Eagles didn’t beat a single playoff team in 2021, prompting general manager Howie Roseman to look inward, understanding Philadelphia needed serious upgrades.

The result was a slew of activity.

Roseman traded for star receiver A.J. Brown on draft night from the Tennessee Titans, giving up a first-round choice. However, Philadelphia had two such picks and used the other on defensive tackle Jordan Davis out of Georgia, adding to a great interior which includes Javon Hargrave and Fletcher Cox. In the third round, another Bulldog with linebacker Nakobi Dean, who was projected universally as a first-rounder.

Finally, the Eagles took advantage of the New York Giants’ cap situation and signed star corner James Bradberry, pairing him with Darius Slay on the perimeter.

All of this bodes well for Hurts, who enters a critical year surrounded by one of the league’s best rosters. If the quarterback doesn’t improve, Roseman has two ’23 first-round picks to potentially upgrade.

Yet, Hurts now has Devonta Smith and Brown to target along with a burgeoning defense, loaded with stars both up front and in the back. It’s a great position to succeed in, and one Hurts must take advantage of.

History lesson

Few teams have ever been carried by one player quite like the 1977 Chicago Bears.

In ’77, Chicago reached the playoffs for the first time since beating the New York Giants in the 1963 NFL Championship Game. It was almost solely because of future Hall of Fame running back Walter Payton.

Payton ran for 1,852 yards and totaled 2,121 total yards from scrimmage, accounting for 45.6 percent of the Bears’ output that season. Payton also scored 16 of the team’s 29 offensive touchdowns, and was the only member of Chicago to make the Pro Bowl or All-Pro squads.

Ultimately, Chicago went 9-5 and earned a wild card spot before losing to the Cowboys, 37-7, in the Divisional round.

Parting shot

This is an NFL column, and I’m an NFL reporter. My job is to inform on and discuss football. But I’m an American and a father well before the aforementioned title. And in this moment, I’m furious.

On Tuesday in Uvalde, Tx., 21 people were murdered during a mass shooting at Robb Elementary School, including two teachers and 19 children.

In the days since, we’ve seen the typical nonsense. Talk from certain politicians about the need to fortify schools as though they’re prisons, reducing doors, blaming Godlessness and video games, etc. Anything but the obvious: common-sense gun laws.

What are we doing? Who are we as a society?

I’m not looking for a repeal of the Second Amendment or to keep guns away from the regular citizen. Not at all. I also believe the country — and the globe — could certainly use more attention paid to mental health. That’s a real problem.

But to avoid a discussion on guns after such a horrific tragedy is to be purposefully obtuse. There’s no reason we can’t keep 2A and also enforce universal background checks, a mental health screening, safety training, a course test and the requirement of a permit.

That’s barely more than what getting a driver’s license asks of us.

I’ve seen all the arguments about why guns aren’t to blame. Most of them are hogwash. All the other factors constantly brought up are also present in every other country on earth, and yet the United States is the only nation which sees more mass shootings than days in the year.

The bottom line is until we keep our children safe, we have failed. And America is failing. Badly.



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Gov’t says crypto miners consume 2% of total electricity in Russia

Crypto miners account for two percent of the total electricity consumption in Russia, according to the latest government estimate.

The energy consumption share of the crypto mining industry has exceeded the country’s agricultural sector, showing signs of recovery after Russia fell out of the top three in the global Bitcoin (BTC) mining hash rate share.

Russia’s deputy minister of trade and industry Vasily Shpak called for bringing the mining industry under the purview of law in the wake of the recent mining estimate. He said:

“Do you know how much mining accounts for in the overall map of electricity generation in our country? And I’ll tell you: more than 2%. This is more than the cost of electricity for agriculture. We cannot but recognize mining in this sense as an industrial activity or industry.”

Crypto mining in Russia falls under the “gray zone‘ where even though it is not banned, it is not regulated either, which creates a risk for those involved in the industry. The deputy minister also assured that once the crypto mining industry is regulated, it would move toward more energy-intensive methods.

Related: Amid sanctions, Russia weighs crypto for international payments: Report

The calls for regulating the crypto mining industry come just days after legislators in the country introduced an updated version of the crypto mining bill. The updated bill removed two sub-sections – the obligation for mining operators to join a special registry and a one-year tax amnesty for all those who’ve registered.

Apart from the deputy minister of trade, the country’s prime minister Mikhail Mishustin has also batted for looking into the crypto mining industry, In April Mishustin has said:

“We also think that in order to stimulate investment, primarily in fixed capital, we can discuss mining issues, this is the creation of data centers and related infrastructure,”

The Russian central bank on the other hand continues to call for a blanket ban on mining operations in the country.

Bitcoin mining hash rate share. Source: CBECI

Russia’s BTC mining hash rate share dropped to 4.55% behind Kazakhstan, China and the United States in the latest report from the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index (CBECI).

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South Korean authorities reportedly probe staff behind Terra

The South Korean government continues to investigate Terraform Labs, the firm behind the Terra Network as well as Luna Classic (LUNC), previously known as Terra (LUNA), and TerraUSD (UST) tokens, by reportedly summoning subpoenas to employees.

South Korean authorities have reportedly summoned all employees at Terraform Labs as part of a full-scale investigation of the collapse of UST and LUNC, the local news agency JTBC reported on Saturday.

According to the report, the probe is conducted by the joint financial and securities crime investigation team of the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors Office. The authorities are looking into the case to check for signs of intentional price manipulation and whether the tokens went through proper listing procedures.

The investigators also reportedly alleged that the Terra token’s mechanism was faulty in the first place, as stablecoin UST is not pegged to a stable collateral or profit model. “At a certain point in time, there is no other way but to collapse because it cannot handle interest payments and fluctuations in value,” the authorities reportedly said.

As previously reported, Terra investors filed a class-action suit against Terraform Labs CEO Do Kwon and co-founder Shin Hyun-seun in mid-May, demanding a record of user accounts, marketing materials and UST-related communications. The investors reportedly lost up to $44 million worth of deposited funds after LUNC tanked 99% and UST lost its 1:1 peg value to the United States dollar.

According to some reports, Terraform Labs dissolved its South Korean branch days before the LUNC and UST collapse, with some speculating that Kwon closed the local division to evade taxes. South Korea’s national tax agency eventually slapped Terraform Labs and its co-founder with a $78 million penalty for tax evasion.

Related: Investors dumping on Terra as LUNA 2 tanks 70% in two days

The news comes amid Terraform Labs on May 28 relaunching Terra’s new chain, Terra 2.0, aiming to revive the crashed Terra ecosystem. Major crypto exchanges including Binance and FTX said that they were working closely with the Terra team to support the upcoming airdrop to help affected users. The new LUNA token plummeted 70% shortly after going live, with many investors dumping on Terra 2.0.

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UN Deeply Troubled by Impending Cuts on Development Aid by Rich Nations — Global Issues

UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina J. Mohammed at the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) meeting mid-May.
  • by Thalif Deen (united nations)
  • Inter Press Service

In an advance warning of the upcoming cuts, the UN’s Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed told a recent meeting of the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC): “As Chair of the United Nations Sustainable Development Group, I am deeply troubled over recent decisions and proposals to markedly cut Official Development Assistance (ODA) to service the impacts of the war in Ukraine on refugees”.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who was equally concerned about the impending reductions, has urged donor nations to reconsider making cuts that will affect the world’s most vulnerable.

The people who benefit from the work of the UN system need additional and more predictable funding, he added. “Contributions to key UN agencies, funds and programmes, working with people on the ground, are facing steep proposed reductions. Cuts to development and the United Nations mean scaling back support at a time when demand for support to meet the deepening development needs has reached an all-time high”.

He said ODA is more necessary than ever, and called upon all countries to demonstrate solidarity, invest in resilience, and prevent the current crisis from escalating further.

According to a UN report, titled 2022 Financing for Sustainable Development Report: Bridging the Finance Divide released last April, “the fallout from the crisis in Ukraine, with increased spending on refugees in Europe, may mean cuts to the aid provided to the poorest countries”

At a meeting in mid-May, the Group of Seven – comprising some of world’s biggest economies — Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, UK and the US, plus the European Union– agreed to provide nearly $20 billion to support Ukraine and bolster its war-ravaged economy.

Separately the US has pledged over $40 billion in economic, humanitarian and military assistance to Ukraine since the Russian invasion last February.

The widespread fear is that the collective $60 billion assistance to Ukraine may result in corresponding reductions in ODA.

Bhumika Muchhala, senior advocate on global economic governance at the Third World Network, told IPS cuts to ODA at a time of a convergence of crises in the Global South is extremely concerning.

She said the pandemic is still ongoing, and health and economic recovery need immediate funds. Food security is being threatened by global supply disruptions, exacerbated by the war in Ukraine, creating urgent crises of malnutrition, hunger and even famine.

She also pointed out that climate change is creating catastrophes every day, from fatal heat waves to floods and droughts, while both existing climate financing as well as ODA commitments still remain unfulfilled by rich countries.

“Underpinning these crises is the surge in gender inequality, as women absorb the shocks and costs of global inequalities”.

“Making matters worse, a large number of developing countries are in debt distress or experiencing debt crisis, leading to another era of austerity that is already arresting the achievement of SDGs, resulting in a retrogression of poverty reduction that has taken many decades of hard-won economic and social development to achieve”. said Muchhala.

In light of the fact that every crisis in the South will ripple through the world economy with adverse effects for all, “rich countries have a collective duty to fulfill existing ODA commitments, as well as climate financing commitments and efforts to create genuine fiscal space for developing countries through equitable debt restructuring, international tax cooperation to eradicate illicit financial flows, and needs-based issuances of Special Drawing Rights,” she declared.

The Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), comprising some of the world’s richest nations, has been providing development assistance since the 1960s.

According to OECD, ODA is defined as “government aid that promotes and specifically targets the economic development and welfare of developing countries”.

The DAC adopted ODA as the “gold standard” of foreign aid in 1969 and it remains the main source of financing for development aid.

The April UN report, 2022 Financing for Sustainable Development Report: Bridging the Finance Divide, said record growth of Official Development Assistance, increased to its highest level ever in 2020, rising to $161.2 billion.

“Yet, 13 countries cut ODA, and the sum remains insufficient for the vast needs of developing countries”.

But according to OECD, ODA rose to an all-time high of $178.9 billion in 2021, up 4.4% in real terms from 2020 as developed countries stepped up to help developing countries grappling with the COVID-19 crisis, according to the latest available figures.

This figure included $ 6.3 billion spent on providing COVID-19 vaccines to developing countries, equivalent to 3.5% of total ODA. Excluding ODA for donated COVID-19 vaccines, ODA was up 0.6% in real terms from 2020.

The 2021 ODA total is equivalent to 0.33% of DAC donors’ combined gross national income (GNI) and still below the UN target of 0.7% ODA to GNI.

The beneficiaries of ODA include the UN’s 46 least developed countries (LDCs), described as the poorest of the world’s poor. https://unctad.org/topic/least-developed-countries/list

Meanwhile, in a new report released May 24, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) warned of the direct and indirect impacts of the war in Ukraine on the African continent, which could further stall the continent’s development trajectory already significantly jeopardized by the COVID-19 crisis.

This report, entitled “The Impact of the War in Ukraine on Sustainable Development in Africa”, reinforces findings of the Global Crisis Response Group (GCRG) that the war in Ukraine is pushing the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals and the aspirations of the African Union’s Agenda 2063 further out of reach, and provides key recommendations for actions that need to be taken immediately, to avert further crises in Africa.

“Africa is facing a double crisis with the combined effects of the war in Ukraine and of the COVID-19 pandemic. However, with strategic partnerships, the crisis also presented the opportunity to rechart Africa’s development trajectory, breaking away from a dependency cycle” said Achim Steiner, Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and UNDP Administrator.

“Now is a critical time for action. It is time to intensify efforts and reframe development finance, strengthen resilience in African economies, and foster economic transformation as a key driver for change in Africa.”

According to the report, some of the direct impacts of the crisis in Africa include trade disruption, food and fuel price spikes, macroeconomic instability, and security challenges. African countries are particularly affected due to their heavy reliance on imports from Russia and Ukraine.

The current hike in prices for food and fuel directly affects the entire continent, including the biggest economies, as food and fuel account for over one-third of the consumer price index in most African countries, (Nigeria 57 per cent, Egypt 60 per cent, Ghana 54 per cent, and Cameroon 42 per cent).

In 2020, African countries imported $4.0 billion worth of agricultural products from Russia, 90 per cent of which was wheat.

The full report is accessible

Daniel D. Bradlow, SARCHI Professor of International Development Law and African Economic Relations at the University of Pretoria told IPS: “I think the UNDP statement gives a good summary of the situation”.

“The impact of the war in Ukraine is having a devastating impact on Africa. If it continues it is likely to lead to hunger, increased poverty and serious debt crises across the continent,” he added.

“If the Western countries really wanted African support for the war in Ukraine, they should have taken steps to shield Africa and other parts of the Global South from the impacts of a European war. Instead, they are redirecting aid that could have gone to Africa to Ukraine and are cutting their aid budgets”.

He pointed out that the support that is being offered through the IFIs and others are likely to be in the form of loans rather than grants.

“This means that at the end of the day, the Western states are making African states pay for a conflict in Europe that suits their political agendas.”

In a statement last April, Jeroen Kwakkenbos, EU aid expert at Oxfam said donors have thrown out the rule book by counting vaccine donations in aid budgets.

“Over 350 million vaccine doses came from hoarded stocks, some of which, were donated far too close to their expiry date. Many more were donated without essential equipment such as syringes making them almost useless. Including these ‘donations’ in aid budgets inflates aid. It is merely donors patting themselves on the back for a job that may have cost lives,” he noted

“The war in Ukraine poses a risk to future aid budgets. Aid is already being pulled from countries like Syria to fund the reception of Ukrainian refugees in Europe.”

“We are left with the bizarre situation where European countries could become the largest recipients of their own aid. Instead of cherry-picking humanitarian crises, donor governments need to boost aid budgets to meet the challenges of today.”

IPS UN Bureau Report


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© Inter Press Service (2022) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service



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30 Secrets About Stranger Things Revealed

16. Natalia Dyer and Charlie Heaton, who play love interests Nancy and Jonathan, began dating in 2016, but have mostly kept their relationship private.

“That’s something important to me—with my family, with my friends, I really like to keep it for me,” Dyer told Refinery 29 in 2019, though she did admit, “It’s an interesting thing to work with somebody who you go home with. It’s always really fun.”

17. Believe it or not, two fan-favorite characters were not supposed to make it out of seaso one alive, including Joe Keery’s well-coiffed Steve Harrington, who was initially scripted to be the bad boyfriend before the actor was cast.

“We love Joe. We fell in love with him during the making of season one, which is why we ended up writing that arc for him where he’s helping to save the day with Jonathan [Charlie Heaton] and Nancy,” Ross told The Hollywood Reporter in 2017. “Steve was supposed to be this jocky douchebag, and Joe was so much more than that.”

18. Also slated to perish was Eleven. Yes, really

“Eleven was going to sacrifice herself to save the day,” Ross said in the 2018 book Stranger Things: Worlds Turned Upside Down. “That was always the end game. But once we realized that the show was potentially going to go on longer than one season, we needed to leave it more up in the air, because deep down we knew the show just wouldn’t really work without Eleven. And at that point, we knew how special Millie was. If there was going to be more Stranger Things, Eleven had to come back.”

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Realme C30 Key Specifications, Price Tipped; May Feature 5,000mAh Battery With 10W Charging

Realme C30 has been making the rounds at various certification sites prior to its launch, including the Bureau of Indian Standard (BIS). Now, two notable tipsters have suggested what we could expect from this smartphone when it eventually arrives in India. This rumoured handset has been tipped to feature a 5,000mAh battery with support for 10W charging. Realme is expected to target the entry-level smartphone segment with the Realme C30. It is likely to offer up to 3GB of RAM and 32GB of storage.

Realme C30 pricing (expected)

According to the post shared by tipster Mukul Sharma (@stufflistings) on Twitter, the Realme C30 could arrive with 2GB RAM + 32GB storage and 3GB RAM + 32GB storage configurations. It is expected to come in Bamboo Green, Denim Black, and Lake Blue colours. Tipster Paras Guglani (@passionategeekz) has further added that this Realme smartphone could be priced around Rs. 7,000.

Realme C30 specifications (expected)

The Realme C30 could feature a 6.6-inch full-HD+ display. It is likely to pack a Unisoc chipset under the hood. In terms of cameras, this smartphone is supposed to have a 13-megapixel rear camera and a 5-megapixel selfie shooter on the front. As previously mentioned, it is expected to be fitted with a 5,000mAh battery with support for 10W fast charging. Furthermore, this smartphone is supposed to be 8.48mm thin and weigh 181g.

Previous reports have suggested that it would boot Android Go Edition out of the box. It is believed to support 2.4GHz Wi-Fi and Bluetooth wireless connectivity.

To recap, Realme had previously launched the Realme C31 in India in March this year. The C31 is yet another affordable smartphone that had a launch price of Rs. 9,999. This handset has a 6.5-inch HD+ display. It is powered by a Unisoc T612 SoC. For optics, it sports a 13-megapixel triple rear camera setup and a 5-megapixel selfie shooter. It also houses a long-lasting 5,000mAh battery.




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Gilbert Arenas explains why Will Smith & Chris Rock’s Oscars slap was staged

Photo: Getty Images

In this VladTV clip, former NBA star guard Gilbert Arenas shares his thoughts on the incident in which Dave Chappelle was attacked on stage during the “Netflix is a Joke” festival.

This prompts a discussion about Will Smith slapping Chris Rock. To that, Gilbert Arenas emphatically states that he believes the whole thing was staged because Smith and Rock were friends who have worked together in the past.

As the interview continues, Arenas continues to make his case that the ordeal was fake by outlining components of the occurrence that didn’t make sense to him:

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Opinion | Asian and Black Communities Have a Long History of Shared Solidarity

Black and Asian communities in America today are often portrayed as in conflict with each other. But we have a long history of organizing with each other, too. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Asian Americans working as immigrant laborers in the United States were often subjected to racial violence. That experience of discrimination created solidarity with the Black community.

In 1869, Frederick Douglass spoke out against restrictions on Chinese immigration. Yuri Kochiyama, a friend and ally of Malcolm X, cradled his bleeding head when he was assassinated in 1965. Jesse Jackson took time away from his presidential bid to protest the killing of Vincent Chin in 1982. These stories of loss, struggle, change and hope are the most powerful tools we have to understand one another and bridge what divides us.

The Asian civil rights movement was inspired in part by the Black civil rights campaigns of the 1960s. It was around this time that the model minority myth emerged, portraying Asian and Pacific Islander Americans as mostly hard-working, well educated and healthy, the artist and activist Betty Yu explained. “The model minority stereotype falsely depicts Asians as a wealthy Ivy League-educated monolith while completely ignoring the economic inequalities that exist to this day,” she said.

As Americans reckon with racial injustice, police brutality and a spike in anti-Asian attacks, we have an opportunity to relearn our shared history and build on that solidarity.

I was living in Taiwan when George Floyd died after being handcuffed and pinned to the ground under a police officer’s knee. I coped by helping to coordinate the Black Lives Matter March in Taipei. It was important to me to stand up for myself and my community and close the metaphorical distance between me and my home.

In New York City, Jeanie Jay Park, the lead organizer of Warriors in the Garden, a collective of nonviolent activists and the founder of Sanitation Nation, a nonprofit youth solidarity collective, was among the thousands marching on the Brooklyn Bridge that summer when a group of young boys approached her and yelled, “Your people killed my people.” They were talking about an officer of Hmong descent who stood by while Mr. Floyd was murdered.

“I understood their reaction,” she said. She has since worked to build intersectional solidarity between Black and Asian communities. Coalition building requires having uncomfortable conversations with not just ourselves but also our families in order to dismantle generational colorism and anti-Black sentiment that exists in many Asian cultures, Ms. Park said.

Nupol Kiazolu, the founder of We Protect Us, believes that practicing love, education and patience is the key to fostering unity between Black and Asian communities. “We must be willing to listen to each other with open minds, ears and hearts,” she said.

Wendy Wang immigrated to the United States in the 1990s. She worked in restaurants around the city, until she was eventually able to open her own restaurant. She’s faced obstacles in the community — someone once shot her husband in the face with a BB gun — but over time she’s built strong relationships with the loyal customers she serves.

I come from a family of immigrants, too. My mother is from Vietnam, and my father is from Nigeria. They met and fell in love in Texas, but their families didn’t approve of their union. As a result, my siblings and I didn’t have a relationship with our extended family or with our cultures, for that matter.

Navigating a mix of identities at times felt complicated. When I’d watch my father’s interactions with law enforcement, I surmised that perhaps one part of my identity could be safer than the other. But the rise in anti-Asian violence has shattered that illusion and reminded me that the shields we hide behind can be dangerously thin.

Social media has been a powerful tool for organizing, but it can also push us into echo chambers. Chelsea Miller, a co-founder of Freedom March NYC and a social impact strategist, believes that challenging rhetorics that divide our communities is a critical step forward. “The reality is, we are all connected,” she said.

I am still striving, and struggling, to carry the weight of being both Black and Asian in this uncertain moment. I feel the push and pull of both sides, but I’m learning to lean into the liminal spaces where my intersectional identity sits. I see that there is nuance, beauty and complexity to be found in that messy middle. Belonging can happen in connections and contradictions and in bridging and breaking. Being in between can be painful but also powerful.

An Rong Xu is a photographer, filmmaker and artist. Leslie Nguyen-Okwu is a journalist and the author of the forthcoming book “American Hyphen.”

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Bitcoin Lightning Network capacity crosses 3900 BTC marking a new ATH

Unwithered by the ongoing bear market, Bitcoin’s (BTC) underlying architecture continues to outperform itself — further securing, decentralizing and speeding up the impenetrable peer-to-peer network. The same holds true for the Bitcoin Lightning Network (LN).

The Bitcoin Lightning Network capacity attained an all-time high of 3915.776 BTC as evidenced by data from Bitcoin Visuals, displaying a commitment to the cause of improving BTC transaction speeds and reducing fees over the layer-2 protocol.

Cumulative Bitcoin capacity across all channels. Source: BitcoinVisuals node

The Bitcoin LN was first implemented into the Bitcoin mainnet in 2018 to address Bitcoin’s infamous scalability issues and has ever since been able to maintain an upward trajectory in terms of expanding its capacity. 

The climb, however, saw a temporary disruption on April 18, when the LN capacity dropped by 7.7% — from 3687.051 to 3402.273 BTC in a matter of a week. Showcasing network resilience, the drop was accompanied by a quick recovery back to 3718.351 BTC by May 2.

Bitcoin Lightning Network statistics. Source: 1ml

Moreover, statistics data from 1ml shows that all other aspects of the Bitcoin Lightning Network continue to grow parallel to Bitcoin’s global adoption drive.

Related: Layer-2 adoption could spur the next crypto turning point

A Redditor’s data-driven prediction hints at a major disruption that will see the crypto industry move away from bridging between L1 blockchains toward L2s. As explained by the OP:

“L2 adoption is happening now, even if it is slow and in bursts. Behind the scenes, L2’s are improving reliability, decreasing fees, and increasing accessibility. L2’s are still building and improving, and that’s fantastic.”

As Cointelegraph previously reported, L2 scaling solutions take advantage of L1’s security and process multiple transactions into a single package.

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Realme Confirms GT Neo 3T Launch Date Confirmed, 3 Variants Expected

Realme had announced that it will soon hold the GT Neo 3 series launch event and that the three in the GT Neo 3 also stands for three models and not just third-generation. Now, the Chinese company has confirmed that one of the three upcoming models, Realme GT Neo 3T, will launch on June 7. The smartphone has been tipped to launch in India next month with a Snapdragon 870 SoC. It is expected to be the successor to the GT Neo 2T that was launched in China in October last year.

The Chinese smartphone brand, Realme, has announced in a tweet that the company will launch the Realme GT Neo 3T at its upcoming GT Neo 3 series launch event. Realme Indonesia has confirmed a June 7 launch date via Twitter for the smartphone.

Earlier, the company had tweeted that in the near future the company will hold the GT Neo 3 series launch event. The company also said that there will be three models of the smartphone.

Realme GT Neo 3T is the first model that the company has confirmed of the three that will launch at the event. The company had also teased the model 4 hours before the confirmation.

Realme GT Neo 3T specifications (expected)

According to a report, the Realme GT Neo 3T will come with a 6.5-inch touchscreen and 256GB of internal memory. The smartphone is expected to get a 64-megapixel primary camera and a 16-megapixel selfie camera. The smartphone was also spotted on the Geekbench benchmarking website. The listing showed that the smartphone will feature a Qualcomm Snapdragon SoC with a 1 + 3 + 4 core configuration and Adreno 650 GPU. Based on the details, it is expected to get the octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 870 SoC. The smartphone is also expected to get an 8GB RAM variant and Android 12 with Realme UI 3.0 on top. It is said to be the successor to the Realme GT Neo 2T that was launched in China in October 2021.

Realme GT Neo 3T has been tipped to launch in June 2022 in India, but the company is yet to confirm official launch dates of the model in the country. The company has also not provided any details regarding the price of the device.




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