Mike Tomlin: ‘I Have Not Talked to Le’Veon, and I Really Have No Le’Veon Update’

Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin listens to a question while meeting with reporters following a 26-14 loss to the Baltimore Ravens in an NFL football game in Pittsburgh, Sunday, Sept. 30, 2018. (AP Photo/Fred Vuich)

Fred Vuich/Associated Press

On Monday, Jeremy Fowler of ESPN.com reported Pittsburgh Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell was expected to end his holdout and return to the team in either Week 7 or Week 8.

On Tuesday, however, Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin told reporters he didn’t have an update on Bell’s status. 

“I have not talked to Le’Veon, and I really have no Le’Veon update,” he said, per Aditi Kinkhabwala‏ of the NFL Network. “We’ll cross that bridge when we come [to] it. Nothing has changed from my perspective in that regard.”

According to Fowler, Bell is hoping to sign a long-term extension with the Steelers after the season and is holding out to “preserve his body.”

“It sucks having to sit out football,” Bell told Fowler. “I want to play. I want to win games and the playoffs. But I’ve gotta take this stand. Knowing my worth and knowing I can tear a ligament or get surgery at any time, I knew I couldn’t play 16 games with 400 or more touches.”

Bell also told Fowler he never intended to sit out the entire season, and that he’s in good enough shape that he could play for the team “tomorrow” if he ended his holdout.

ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported on Sept. 30 the Steelers were open to trading Bell, meanwhile, noting, “Some teams have inquired about Bell, while others are mulling whether to make a move, but none has been aggressive so far, according to sources.”

In Bell’s absence, the Steelers have struggled, going 1-2-1 and averaging 72.2 rushing yards per game—28th in the NFL. Running back James Conner has been inconsistent with 232 rushing yards and three touchdowns to go with 18 receptions for 164 yards. 

Connor has just 97 rushing yards in the team’s past three games, and it’s clear Pittsburgh is better off with Bell. In Bell’s absence, the Steelers have leaned more heavily on quarterback Ben Roethlisberger and have gotten mixed results.

“I don’t think I’m on the same page with anybody right now,” Roethlisberger said after the team’s loss to the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday, per Fowler. “I’m not playing well enough. I need to play better. Today was just a bad day at the office…I promise I’ll be back to play better.”

Getting Bell back would help.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2RjtWHh
via IFTTT

Brazil elections 2018 at a glance

Brazilians will head to the polls on October 7 for national and state-level elections, with more than 1,650 positions up for grabs, including the presidency.

More than 147 million people are eligible to vote. Participation is compulsory for “literate” Brazilians aged 18-70.

At stake are the country’s presidency, all 27 state governorships, most of the seats in Congress – including two-thirds of the 81-member upper-house Senate and all 513 places in the lower-house Chamber of Deputies – and 1,059 positions within state legislatures.

Two different electoral systems are used to decide the various posts: majority and proportional.  All voting is done electronically using a single, number-based method. Participants will first decide on state legislators before voting on congressional positions, state governors and, finally, the presidency.

Presidential and state governor candidates must win an absolute majority of the vote to be elected. If no candidate is able to secure more than 50 percent of support in the first round, the two contenders with the highest number of votes will go head-to-head in a second ballot on October 28.

Senators, meanwhile, are elected by a simple majority and do not require more than 50 percent of support to win office.

Federal and state deputies – in the lower house Chamber of Deputies and state legislatures respectively – are elected via a proportional system.

Thirteen politicians are vying to become the country’s 38th president.

Far-right candidate Jair Bolsonaro leads the latest polls, with about 28 percent of the vote. Leftist candidate Fernando Haddad, who replaced the imprisoned yet widely popular former president Luiz Inacio “Lula” da Silva as the Workers’ Party candidate earlier this month, trailed in second place with about 22 percent of support.

A second-round vote on October 28 is likely, with all recent polling pointing towards no contender winning more than 50 percent support in the first-round poll.

The successful candidate will begin a four-year term on January 1, 2019.

Source: Al Jazeera News

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2ybJowb
via IFTTT

The liar vs. the do-nothing: Florida’s first Senate debate gets mean


Gov. Rick Scott is pictured. | AP Photo

On almost every topic, Rick Scott repeated a “do-nothing” refrain: “My opponent has had 40 years to do something on immigration and he’s absolutely done nothing.” | AP Photo

MIRAMAR — Gov. Rick Scott’s a liar. Sen. Bill Nelson‘s a do-nothing.

The two rivals’ descriptions for each other in their first debate Tuesday underscored the bitterness flowing through Florida’s nationally watched Senate race.

Story Continued Below

On immigration, gun control, Florida’s water pollution crisis, Cuba, health care policy and the Supreme Court nomination fight over Brett Kavanaugh, the Republican governor and the Democratic incumbent agreed on virtually nothing during the hour-long Telemundo 51 debate. (The channel plans to broadcast the debate at 7 p.m. in Spanish translation. Select NBC stations will webcast it in English.)

The first debate topic — immigration — set the tone.

Nelson said he favored comprehensive immigration reform and pointed out that he voted for the bipartisan Senate immigration legislation that died in 2013 in the House, where the GOP majority refused to even hear the bill. Nelson said the bill’s failure, coupled with President Donald Trump’s family separation policy at the borders, have led to horrific results — although the senator didn’t emphasize the president’s role.

“You see children being taken away from their families at the border, which, by the way, when it was happening, my opponent was silent,” Nelson said.

Scott noted that wasn’t true: “With regard to the kids that were separated from their parents, I completely disagreed with the president. And my opponent should have gone to DC and gotten something done.”

Scott did criticize the family-separation policy, after Nelson and Democrats began intensifying their criticism of it.

On almost every topic, Scott repeated the “do-nothing” refrain. “My opponent has had 40 years to do something on immigration and he’s absolutely done nothing. … It’s remarkable he’s been there when his parties controlled both chambers and the White House and he did nothing. … All these problems are caused because Congress failed to act, failed to act, failed to act.”

Scott said the government needs to first secure the border, then outlaw sanctuary cities and “take care” of young immigrants under the Trump-scuttled DACA program.

Nelson responded by noting that Scott in 2010 supported the Arizona-style immigration law that led to racial profiling.

“You are starting to hear from my opponent that, whatever he says, is simply not true,” Nelson said. “He has nine TV advertisements on the air. A fact-checking independent organization has checked them. And they’re all either false or ‘Pants on Fire false’. The technique that my opponent uses is he tries to distract.”

Scott responded by attacking the fact-checking website, PolitiFact, because it’s “an arm of the Tampa Bay Times. They’re not exactly perceived to be a nonpartisan group … I would look at it as a part of the Democrat Party.”

Earlier that day, however, PolitiFact, found that one of Scott’s attack ads — concerning Nelson’s low committee attendance record — was true.

On gun control, the contrasts between the two are even sharper. Nelson wants a ban of tactical rifles commonly known as assault weapons. Scott doesn’t.

Nelson pointed out that Scott has had an “A” rating from the National Rifle Association due to the slew of pro-gun laws he has signed. And to drive his point home, Nelson brought to the debate Fred Guttenberg, whose 14-year-old daughter Jamie was one of 17 people murdered Feb. 14 in the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School massacre.

“I hope, Governor, that you will look Fred Guttenberg in the face and tell him that you’re not going to support those kinds of policies that you have with the NRA,” Nelson said.

Scott responded with an expression of sympathy for all the Parkland families, some of whom support him.

“My heart goes out to them,” Scott said. “I believe in the Second Amendment. I believe in all the amendments to the Bill of Rights. In contrast to Senator Nelson, who has never gotten anything done with regard to creating school safety, we actually did something.”

In signing the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act, which included limited gun control measures, Scott bucked the NRA. Scott didn’t mention that, but he emphasized how the act allows police to take away guns from dangerous individuals, increases mental health funding and boosts spending on school security.

Scott later brought an audience member of his own: Sirley Vila Leon, a Cuban woman whose hand was hacked off with a machete by Cuban security forces, who then stuck her severed stump in the mud so she would get an infection. Her crime, Scott said, was that she opposed a school closing. Scott said Nelson owed her an explanation for the senator’s backing of former president Barack Obama’s Cuba rapprochement that, five months before, Nelson called a “Hallelujah Day.”

To Scott, the policy only emboldened the Castro dictatorship, which has worked with Venezuela’s totalitarian regime and destabilized the once-powerful South American country.

“Senator Nelson,” Scott said, “Why don’t you explain to her your appeasement policy? Maybe now you can go back and say, ‘I apologize because it absolutely didn’t work.’”

Nelson said that, contrary to Scott’s effort to make him look like a Castro buddy, he has been repeatedly banned from traveling to Cuba because of his opposition to the regime.

Regarding health care in Florida — which has one of the nation’s largest concentrations of Obamacare enrollees, at about 2 million — Nelson pointed out that Scott repeatedly opposed the law and refused to expand Medicaid to as many as 800,000 more.

Scott said Obamacare was a failure because it did not live up to its promises concerning financial savings. He said the law made “the lie of the century” by promising people could keep their plans or doctors if they liked them. Without crediting Obamacare, which gave protections for people with pre-existing conditions, Scott said he supported this type of health coverage.

Nelson said Scott wasn’t telling the truth.

“I just heard the governor say that he favors the insurance for [people with] pre-existing conditions. That’s exactly the opposite of what he has allowed,” Nelson said, noting that Florida filed “suit to declare unconstitutional pre-existing conditions protection that is in the law. That is unconscionable.”

Scott shifted focus to Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, who filed the suit, and said he has no control over her. However, Scott has refused to oppose the suit to undo the coverage.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2Rl2clJ
via IFTTT

Staten Harry is the internet’s cutest lip-sync star

2018%2f07%2f11%2fcc%2fwebp.netresizeimage4.f6ff3By Xavier Piedra

This is Ode To…, a weekly column where we share the stuff we’re really into in hopes that you’ll be really into it, too.

It always warms my heart to see a fiercely fearless kid. Take, for example, Staten Harry, an incredible lip-sync assassin in-the-making and Lady Gaga super fan who loves to upload videos of himself lip syncing to Mother Monster.

SEE ALSO: This Instagram account’s ode to queer women’s fashion is nostalgia at its gayest

Staten Harry became an internet sensation after he started uploading his performances to Twitter, and his amazing lip-sync skills and positive aura have earned him thousands of fans.

Take a look at his stellar lip sync of Gaga’s “Born This Way.”

Hey @LadyGagaUpdated I have made a fun little video for Gaga/ all of you monsters to see to brighten your day and make you smile! I would love it so much if you would retweet it please! I pinned it to my profile! I really hope Gaga sees it! Thank you hugs and paws up! 😘💖💕🦄🦄 pic.twitter.com/ZLKTfEN6xQ

— The REAL. Staten (Stayten) Harry😘🐾🤗🤴🏻💞🌟⭐ (@TheREALStaten) July 11, 2018

And here he is singing “Hair.”

And of course there’s a video of him lip-syncing to “Bad Romance.”

This child literally radiates positivity, and I can’t help but smile whenever I watch his videos. 

Staten Harry currently has a follower count of more than 15,000 on his Twitter page, so he’s doing pretty well for himself so far. He’ll often tag icons like RuPaul, Gaga, and tons of Gaga fan accounts in the tweets accompanying his videos. This child is driven, and we could all take a lesson from him on personal branding.

Whats up friends!!! Here is myy newww newww video! I had to cut some of the beginning😬. Sorry!! It wasn’t that important anyway. And plus it wasn’t going to fit😵. The end is the best☺. Okay! I hope you like likeeee it!! I love ya all sooo much💖💓😘💕💗💗💓💓💞💝💘💘💘💘💘 pic.twitter.com/QQYA0HBOv9

— The REAL. Staten (Stayten) Harry😘🐾🤗🤴🏻💞🌟⭐ (@TheREALStaten) August 24, 2018

His most popular upload is a video of his lip-sync to “Alejandro,” which incidentally inspired a kind of meme. There’s a point in the video where he says, “Everyone better be jumping,” while waving his hand in the air, and it’s somehow become pure meme gold.

Is there anything Staten Harry can’t do?

everyone better be jumping!!!

👋


     😁

        || _

    _/¯  ¯_

|||

— riel (@collectcalIs) September 30, 2018

Staten Harry’s videos serve as a sweet reminder that we should all let our inner lip-sync queen out once in a while. I 1,000 percent stan.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2DOBD5F
via IFTTT

How you can help victims of Indonesia’s earthquake and tsunami

A magnitude 7.5 earthquake and subsequent tsunami devastated the Indonesian island region of Sulawesi on Friday. The natural disasters claimed at least 1,234 lives, according to the death toll reported on Tuesday.

Officials fear the toll will continue to rise. Most of these deaths have occurred in the coastal city of Palu, with many victims still to be located within the ruins. 

Mass burials have begun in the area, and thousands are now homeless across the region, sheltering in some 200 displacement sites.

SEE ALSO: An Indonesian tsunami’s devastation captured in new, horrifying video

We don’t know the full breadth of the impact of the disaster just yet. As Reuters reports, more remote areas have been out of contact for over three days, though rescuers are finally reaching those locations.

Thousands of homes have collapsed in the Sulawesi region, along with hospitals, hotels, and shopping centers.

Thousands of homes have collapsed in the Sulawesi region, along with hospitals, hotels, and shopping centers.

Image: Carl Court/Getty Images

Indonesian President Joko Widodo has requested “urgent” international aid, and the global community is identifying different ways to assist Indonesia during the disaster.

The hardest hit cities, Palu and the coastal city Donggala, are the most in need. According to Charity Navigator, officials are reporting that supplies like food, water, and medicine are running low, shelter is scarce for thousands of displaced people, and some of the affected areas are proving hard to reach. Clearing a path to reach victims and deliver aid is a priority.

BBC reports that aid agencies have been struggling to access affected areas due to damage at Palu’s main airport, roads cut off by landslides, and power is out across much of the region. 

So, how can you personally help? 

Here’s our list of ways you can support survivors, which will be updated to reflect the ultimate scale of the earthquake and tsunami’s devastation:

1. Donate to reputable nonprofits and charities. 

Charity Navigator has published a list of highly-rated organisations that are focused on delivering general aid and relief, medical services and hygiene kits, as well as food, water, toilets, and basic shelter.

Here are the organisations listed as working on tsunami recovery for Indonesia: Heart to Heart International, World Vision, Direct Relief, Project HOPE, Water Mission, GlobalGiving, Save the Children, International Medical Corps, Helping Hand for Relief and Development, and World Help.

Though not featured on Charity Navigator’s list, Indonesian Red Cross Society (or Palang Merah Indonesia), Red Cross Australia, UNICEF, Oxfam, and CARE Australia, are organisations already on the ground or preparing to help victims. 

Indonesian Red Cross (or PMI) rescue workers use a tracked vehicle to move through an area destroyed by the tsunami in Palu.

Indonesian Red Cross (or PMI) rescue workers use a tracked vehicle to move through an area destroyed by the tsunami in Palu.

Image: Carl Court/Getty Images

Doctors Without Borders has also deployed a local team to Central Sulawesi. The team includes medical, logistics, and water and sanitation specialists. 

2. Consider ways to help the most vulnerable communities. 

Natural disasters affect people in different ways, but the most vulnerable communities are often overlooked in the aftermath.

Humanity and Inclusion, a U.S.-based not-for-profit that promotes disability rights, is taking donations for basic aid and rehabilitation care for tsunami survivors with serious injuries and disabilities. 

Thousands of people have been left homeless from the tsunami, in addition to locals who were already experiencing homelessness. Consider donating to local, national, or international organisations that are trying to address the immediate crisis of homelessness. Oxfam, for example, is working with local Indonesian partners to deliver essential aid like emergency shelters, soap and sanitary items, water containers, tarps, and toilets.

Some of the most vulnerable survivors of a natural disaster are the youngest among us. Consider supporting nonprofit groups that serve children. Save the Children is on the ground in Sulawesi, providing medical care, emotional support, and child-friendly spaces in shelters with diapers and cribs. 

3. Keep checking in after the headlines have faded

The fallout after a natural disaster is immense, but it eventually stops making headlines. Once the media coverage has ebbed, those affected by the disaster still have to piece together their lives.

Keep checking in with your chosen charity to see how things are progressing, and check situation updates from the ASEAN Coordinating Center for Humanitarian Assistance (AHA Center).

Finally, if you need guidance on deciding which cause to support amongst so many worthy aid and recovery efforts, consult Charity Navigator’s tips for how to give in a crisis. Strategies include giving money instead of material items and making long-term donations.  

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2xVc3GK
via IFTTT

Dozens killed in Ethiopia ethnic clashes

Thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of Addis Ababa in September to protest attacks on minorities [Anadolu]
Thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of Addis Ababa in September to protest attacks on minorities [Anadolu]

At least 44 people were killed during fighting between rival ethnic groups in western Ethiopia over the weekend, state-affiliated media reported.

The clashes occurred on the border between the central Oromia and western Benishangul-Gumuz regions, local officials said on Tuesday.

Residents in the Benishangul-Gumuz region said violence erupted on Friday after four local officials were killed during a visit to the neighbouring Oromia region.

Clashes between youths from rival ethnic groups armed with rocks and knives have forced more than 70,000 people to flee their homes, with security forces deployed to pacify the area, the Oromia region’s administration said.

Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed – the diverse country’s first Oromo leader – came to office in April and turned politics on its head by making peace with long-term foe Eritrea, freeing prisoners and promising a string of sweeping economic and political reforms.

He also promised to ease ethnic tensions and steer the state away from a hardline security policy that has been in place for decades.

Abiy has received praise from around the globe for his reformist agenda. However, a wave of communal violence, mostly over land issues, has marred the first few months of his rule.

At least 58 people were killed in September when fighting broke out in the capital, Addis Ababa, with those fleeing saying they were targeted by Oromo mobs because they are members of minority ethnic groups.

Nearly one million people have been forced from their homes in southern Ethiopia since clashes erupted there in April, according to UN agencies.

SOURCE: News agencies

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2DPa1NJ
via IFTTT

McConnell: Senate will vote on Kavanaugh this week


Brett Kavanaugh

Brett Kavanaugh needs the support of 50 senators to claim a seat on the Supreme Court. There are 51 Republicans in the chamber. But he still doesn’t have enough votes – for now. | Michael Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images

Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said Tuesday that he doesn’t anticipate the FBI’s final report from its inquiry into Brett Kavanaugh would be made public, adding that such a break from protocol “might actually hurt” the bureau’s ability to conduct such probes.

All 100 senators will have access to the report in a secure setting, but Republicans are worried about breaking precedent by releasing such information, which will be made available before the Senate votes this week on Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination, according to GOP leaders. Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) said senators expect to have reviewed the FBI findings before voting.

Story Continued Below

“People will know what the FBI said before we end up voting,” Cornyn said.

The report may leak out regardless given the public interest in the probe.

The FBI conducted an inquiry after Anita Hill’s sexual harassment allegations against Justice Clarence Thomas in 1991, elements of which were cited by Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) during those hearings.

Whether undecided senators take into account anything other than the FBI report is an open question. Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) said on Tuesday that Kavanaugh’s testimony last week was at times too pointed and added: “We can’t turn the court into a partisan body that acts like a legislative body. That’s not the purpose of the court.” But he also said that wasn’t enough to make him vote on Kavanaugh.

But Grassley defended Kavanaugh from Democratic arguments that his defiant, politically charged testimony last week showed he lacks the temperament to sit on the high court.

“I don’t know that any resentment [Thomas] had because of” Hill’s harassment allegations against him has affected his actions on the court, Grassley said. “I assume you’re going to find the same thing when Kavanaugh gets on the Supreme Court.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell vowed that the Senate would vote on Kavanaugh’s nomination this week as he brushed aside new questions about the judge’s past drinking habits. The Kentucky Republican is in a precarious situation on timing a final vote on President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court pick, with three undecided senators in his own party preferring to wait until after the FBI finishes an inquiry into sexual misconduct allegations against Kavanaugh. McConnell said Tuesday that senators would vote “after the FBI shares what they’ve found,” but reiterated that a floor vote would happen “this week.”

McConnell also dinged Democrats for embracing the allegations of a third woman coming forward with misconduct allegations against Kavanaugh even though Democrats initially hesitated last week. That woman is a client of Michael Avenatti, whom the GOP leader slammed as “a tabloid lawyer.“ The well-known attorney represents adult-film actress Stormy Daniels.

McConnell then mocked a New York Times report centering on police questioning Kavanaugh after a 1985 bar fight.

“Talk about a bombshell?” McConnell asked on the floor.

Senate Republicans are feeling more bullish on Kavanaugh’s fate as their party digs in behind the nominee, according to two GOP senators. They acknowledged that there is risk in the judge opening himself up to the probe but believe chances are low that the FBI uncovers new damaging information.

It’s unclear whether Kavanaugh can win over anyone other than three undecided Republicans and two Democrats no matter what the probe says. Sen. Joe Donnelly (D-Ind.), who opposes Kavanaugh, declined to say Tuesday whether the FBI probe could change his mind, while Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont) has “broader” concerns about Kavanaugh than just the allegations against him, his office said. Both are up for election in states where Trump is popular. Undecided Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota began facing new ads urging them to confirm Kavanaugh on Tuesday.


Democrats are trying to keep their Kavanaugh fight focused on this week’s FBI inquiry, which they view as their strongest chance to coax Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine), Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), and Flake into the opposition camp. They have refrained from making a specific request for a perjury investigation into Kavanaugh’s statements under oath, instead asserting that the 53-year-old appeals court judge has misrepresented himself enough to demonstrate he lacks the temperament to join the Supreme Court.

“Frankly, Judge Kavanaugh’s testimony was better suited for Fox News than a confirmation hearing for the august United States Supreme Court,” Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said Tuesday on the floor.

“It should give us all pause to consider what it means to elevate such a partisan worldview to the Supreme Court, whether it be a Democratic or a Republican partisan view, where rulings must be made on the legal merits, not on the side of the aisle which most benefits,” Schumer added.

Before Avenatti’s client, Julie Swetnick, claimed that Kavanaugh was involved in sexual misconduct in the 1980s, Christine Blasey Ford and Deborah Ramirez came forward with separate allegations of their own. Both Ford’s alleged high school-era sexual assault claim and Ramirez’s college-era misconduct claim against Kavanaugh are part of this week’s FBI probe.

Republicans have sought to poke holes in the narrative Ford laid out during riveting testimony last week about her allegation against Kavanaugh, but Schumer challenged McConnell to directly address whether or not she was a credible witness.

“Does he believe or not believe Dr. Ford?” Schumer asked. “Yes or no. I happen to believe her. He refuses to answer that one way or the other because he knows that Dr. Ford had tremendous credibility.”

If the FBI finishes its Kavanaugh inquiry before Friday, McConnell could move to end debate on the nomination and tee up a final vote by then. But if investigators don’t complete their investigation into claims against the nominee before the Friday deadline, the Senate could stay in session through the weekend in order to meet McConnell’s time frame for a final vote.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2xVbFbg
via IFTTT

Amazon will now pay all of its U.S. employees at least $15

Workers have scored a big win in the fight for $15.
Workers have scored a big win in the fight for $15.

Image: david mcnew/Getty Images

2018%2f06%2f26%2fc2%2f20182f062f252f5a2fphoto.d9abc.b1c04By Matt Binder

Amid increasing public pressure, Amazon has announced it will be raising the minimum wage of all its employees in the U.S. to at least $15 an hour.

The increase in pay for Amazon workers will kick in almost immediately, with the new $15 wage beginning next month.

According to a statement released today by the online retail giant, the wage increase will affect more than 350,000 workers. That number also covers over 100,000 seasonal employees who will soon be hired at by the company throughout the United States for the holidays.” Amazon currently employs around 575,000 workers around the world.

The Amazon employees seeing a bump in pay include full-time, part-time, workers employed by temp agencies, as well as seasonal positions. Workers at Whole Foods, which Amazon owns, will also get the same pay increase, according to the Associated Press.

Amid low pay and reports of poor working conditions, Amazon had long been a target of minimum wage activists and progressives. 

The economic disparity within the company really hit a breaking point this summer amid Amazon hitting a market value of $1 trillion and its founder and CEO Jeff Bezos becoming the richest person in modern history

Some Amazon workers went on strike to protest their conditions. U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, who consistently pressed Amazon on the issue, recently introduced the Stop BEZOS Act, which sought to tax companies with employees who earned wages low enough that they received federal welfare benefits.

“We listened to our critics, thought hard about what we wanted to do, and decided we want to lead,” said Bezos in Amazon’s statement. “We’re excited about this change and encourage our competitors and other large employers to join us.”

In its statement, Amazon also announced that its public policy team will advocate for an increase in the federal minimum wage which currently sits at $7.25 an hour.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2DPXlGq
via IFTTT

Apple Wallet will support college student ID cards on iPhones

Good news, coeds.

Apple announced that it’s launching a pilot program with three universities to support student ID cards in Apple Wallet. Students can add their ID cards to Apple Wallet, allowing them to do things like access dorms or pay for cafeteria meals holding their iPhones or Apple Watches above card readers. 

Sayonara, too-easily-lost pieces of plastic.

SEE ALSO: Young people are the loneliest age group but smartphones aren’t to blame

“When we launched Apple Pay, we embarked on a goal to replace the physical wallet,” Jennifer Bailey, Apple’s vice president of Internet Services said in a statement. “We have expanded the capabilities of Wallet beyond payments, and we’re now thrilled to be working with campuses on adding contactless student ID cards.”

Duke University and the Universities of Alabama and Oklahoma are the three participating schools. Apple says the functionality will come to Johns Hopkins, Santa Clara, and Temple Universities by 2019. CNET reports that schools will have to actively partner with Apple to get student ID support — they can’t just enable the feature on their own.

Duke University and the Universities of Alabama and Oklahoma will support student IDs in Apple Wallet.

Duke University and the Universities of Alabama and Oklahoma will support student IDs in Apple Wallet.

Image: Apple

Adding student ID cards to Apple Wallet makes a lot of sense for Apple, since it further enshrines the iPhone’s indispensability among young adults. A 2017 survey found three-quarters of all U.S. teens with smartphones have iPhones, and 81 percent of teens expect their new phones to be iPhones. In such an influential market, that’s gotta hurt for Android.

As someone who may have lost her student ID card once or twice, the feature also seems genuinely convenient, and potentially more secure than tying campus access and money to a small piece of plastic. Just be sure to keep a spare battery in your backpack.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2xSBfh0
via IFTTT

Cubs Swag King Javier Baez Can Be MLB’s Best Weapon to Win Back Young Fans

PHOENIX, AZ - SEPTEMBER 18:  Javier Baez #9 of the Chicago Cubs hits a two-run home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the first inning of the MLB game at Chase Field on September 18, 2018 in Phoenix, Arizona.  (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

B/R

Off the field, standing in the Chicago Cubs clubhouse, Javier Baez looks young. Younger than 25, which is his actual age. Younger than someone should look when he’s about to begin his fourth consecutive October of postseason baseball.

On the field, Baez plays young, too, with the enthusiasm and swagger of a kid who could just as easily be a 15-year-old showing off for his friends on the schoolyard. But he plays with the smarts and instincts of a 15-year major league veteran.

He hits and runs and plays defense at the highest level, at any position Cubs manager Joe Maddon chooses for him, and he does it all in a way you can’t help but watch.

He really is 25 and really has played in more than 500 major league games, plus another 33 in three postseasons that have seen his Cubs go to the NLCS three straight years and win a historic World Series in one of them.

Baez was important then, and he’s more important now. Without a doubt he’s one of the most valuable players in the game. He might even be the National League‘s Most Valuable Player—that award was voted on this week but will not be announced until November—but his value to the Cubs and to the game as a whole transcends any award.

Quite simply, at a time when baseball worries about appealing to the next generation, Baez is the perfect guy to do it.

Mike Trout probably is the best player in the game. And Christian Yelich may well be the National League MVP, ahead of Baez. But as one National League scout said, Baez may be “the best baseball athlete in the game.” He’s in constant motion, is consistently exciting and is the guy who demands your complete attention.

Not surprisingly, he’s also the player the kids love.

“If you want to talk about energy, every kid’s got energy,” Baez said. “They like to be running around. That’s the way I look at it. I like to run around and have fun out there, obviously to play hard, but at the same time to have fun.”

Yes, fun, because as much as people may want to tell you that baseball in 2018 can be boring, with nothing but home runs and strikeouts and everyone standing around, the game can still be as enjoyable as ever when it’s played the way Baez plays it.

As his teammate and friend Albert Almora Jr. said, “He’s a good reminder that this is a fun game.”

Baez is the living symbol of baseball’s modern era, with his bat flips, his pointing and his willingness to show emotion. He’s also a throwback, given his great feel for the game and how hard he plays it. “He could play baseball in any era,” Cubs outfielder Jason Heyward said. “He’s a baseball player.”

Baez isn’t afraid to show his emotions on the field. “I just be me,” he said.Norm Hall/Getty Images

But he’s one particularly suited to GIFs and blogs and highlights you can watch on your phone and share with your friends.

Did you see Javy circle the bases to score that game-winning run against the San Diego Padres? Did you see him call himself safe after sliding in at home against the Milwaukee Brewers? Did you him snag a line drive against the Los Angeles Dodgers and dive into second base to complete a double play? Did you see him playfully taunt Francisco Lindor after the Cleveland Indians shortstop couldn’t stop him from getting an infield hit?

This Cubs team is full of stars, but players, coaches and others around the club say Baez is the one guy they get asked about the most.

“He’s on the modern edge of pushing the game into a more exciting, personalized feeling and connection with the fans,” said teammate Ben Zobrist. “He’s not a robot out there. The game used to be, let’s all fit inside the box and play the game the right way, as if there’s just one way to do it. He’s just playing it the way he knows how to do it.”

Sometimes, Zobrist says, when players are talking to fans, they are asked to bring over a teammate. “More than anybody else, they’ll be saying, ‘Can you get Javy to do this or that?’” Zobrist said. “More than anybody else.”

He’s the guy they all want to see.

Increasingly, he’s the guy baseball fans everywhere want to see. In numbers released by Major League Baseball at the end of this season, Baez ranked third in jersey sales, behind only Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees and Jose Altuve of the Houston Astros. MLB also said that in year-over-year comparisons, Baez was up 29 percent in Instagram following, 37 percent in Twitter following and 109 percent in internet traffic to his player page on MLB.com in 2018. His All-Star vote total also rose by 30 percent.

It’s all because of what he does, how he plays.

“I just be me,” he said. “It’s me out there.”


It would be easy to make this about young vs. old, new school vs. old school, the bat flippers vs. the fuddy-duddies who can’t deal with a generation that is willing to show off a little bit.

That would be wrong, at least in the case of Baez. It’s easy to find plenty of veteran baseball men who will vouch for him, inside the Cubs clubhouse and around the major leagues.

Then again, it’s also not hard to find some whose respect for him seems more grudging.

“I’m old school,” one longtime National League scout said. “So I don’t like his antics. He likes himself. But I’ve got to admit, he wants to be up in big situations.”

Even the criticisms of Baez always seem to end that way, with a few words of strong praise.

There was a game back in April against the Pittsburgh Pirates. After starting the season slowly, Baez homered twice in a Tuesday afternoon Cubs loss and twice again in a Wednesday night win.

He came up again in the seventh inning that night, in a game the Cubs already led 8-4. When he popped up to shortstop, he took a step toward first base and in frustration flipped his bat in the air.

Baez first came into the national spotlight in the 2016 NLCS, when he shared MVP honors with teammate Jon Lester.

Baez first came into the national spotlight in the 2016 NLCS, when he shared MVP honors with teammate Jon Lester.Harry How/Getty Images

On the game broadcasts, the flip got only a passing mention, noting that Baez was just upset at missing a pitch he could have hit. The next day, though, Pirates manager Clint Hurdle questioned Baez’s “respect for the game.”

It was a one-day story, as Baez admitted he was wrong but defended the way he plays. Hurdle never backed down from his comments, but when asked about the episode a few months later, he also inadvertently praised Baez.

“I was watching one of the most talented players in the game,” Hurdle said, remembering the two-day home run barrage by Baez that preceded the at-bat in question. So when Baez popped up and flipped his bat, Hurdle said, “I was just like, ‘Wow.’ For me, I wasn’t just not going to say anything.”

Hurdle can say what he wants, but the truth is most other managers offer only praise and not criticism when they’re asked about Baez.

“He plays hard,” said Ron Gardenhire of the Detroit Tigers. “And he’s an intelligent player, too.”

“I love how he plays the game,” said Dave Martinez, who worked with Baez as a Cubs coach before leaving after last season to become manager of the Washington Nationals.


Baez has always played hard. It’s one of the things scouts loved about him when they started watching him at Arlington Country Day School in Jacksonville, Florida. Baez had moved there from his native Puerto Rico when he was 13, and by the time he was a high school senior, major league scouts had a good book on him.

“He’s a pit bull,” said one National League scout who has seen Baez all the way back to his teenage years. “He’s always been a pit bull. You don’t change a pit bull.”

That scout tells a story of a game Baez played for Arlington Country Day on a trip to Puerto Rico. It was a big deal for Baez to be back home, and he was already something of a big deal. A pitcher for the Puerto Rican team greeted him with a pitch up and in.

“He just pointed to the other team’s dugout and said, ‘You’re going to pay,’” the scout said. “The next pitch, he swings so hard he drops down to a knee. But he hits the ball so hard it was like a missile off the scoreboard.”

Tim Wilken wasn’t at that game, but he saw Baez quite a bit in high school. Wilken works as a special assistant for the Arizona Diamondbacks now, but he was the Cubs’ director of amateur and professional scouting then. In 2011, when Baez was a high school senior, the Cubs held the ninth pick in the June draft. It was a great year for available talent. The 30 first-rounders included 27 players who have since made it to the big leagues, including such stars as Gerrit Cole, Trevor Bauer, Anthony Rendon, Francisco Lindor and George Springer. Lindor and Baez were often linked that spring as Puerto Rican natives who were in high school in Florida.

Wilken and his scouting staff watched both of them carefully, even after hearing rumors both could be off the board before it was the Cubs’ turn to pick. They debated which infielder they would take if both were still there.

Cole and Bauer went early, with the first and third picks, respectively. The Cleveland Indians ended up taking Lindor with the eighth pick, just ahead of the Cubs. The Cubs’ decision was made for them, but Wilken was thrilled.

“I was going to take Baez over Lindor,” he said.

Baez became a Cub, and just over three years later he made his major league debut. But something else happened before that.

“He became a better runner between Double-A [in 2013] and Triple-A [in 2014],” Wilken said. “He made a concerted effort. His form got better, and he went from being maybe 4.2 [seconds to first base] to 4.05-4.15. Somewhere between Knoxville [Double-A] and Iowa [Triple-A] you started to see a change in him.”

Baez still isn’t one of the very fastest players in baseball. MLB.com’s Statcast says his sprint speed of 28.8 feet per second ranks just 65th in the majors. But he runs the bases so well that he had 21 stolen bases (12th in the National League) and nine triples (tied for fourth in the majors).

He also had more RBI (111) than anyone else in the National League. According to Statcast, his 481-foot home run Aug. 23 at Wrigley Field off Anthony DeSclafani of the Cincinnati Reds was tied for the third-longest in the major leagues in 2018.

Baez and Lindor played against each other in high school and later in the 2016 World Series.

Baez and Lindor played against each other in high school and later in the 2016 World Series.Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Some will downgrade Baez for his lack of walks (29) or his relatively low on-base percentage (.326, which would be the lowest for an MVP since 1965—Zoilo Versalles at .319 with the Minnesota Twins).

But Cubs hitting coach Chili Davis isn’t trying to get Baez to walk more.

“He’s an aggressive hitter, and to be honest, I like aggressive hitters,” Davis said.

Baez is actually swinging at a higher percentage of pitches than he did a year ago, according to FanGraphs (57.9 percent of pitches, as opposed to 56.2 percent). He’s swinging more often at pitches out of the zone and more often at pitches in the zone.

But Davis insists that’s neither a reason for concern nor a sign that what Baez is doing isn’t sustainable. What Davis sees is a hitter who is getting better and better at recognizing spin and understanding which pitches he can drive.

As Davis told Baez: “If you make contact, you’re dangerous. See what you’re firing at.”

Sure enough, Baez has found breaking balls worth firing at. That 481-foot home run off DeSclafani? That was on a slider. So were three of the next six home runs Baez hit (and another was on a changeup).

Baez has improved, but even the old version of him was very, very good. He shared MVP honors with teammate Jon Lester in the 2016 NLCS, in part because of his great defense and lightning-quick tags at second base.

Baez is such a good defender at second that two NL scouts independently compared him to Hall of Famer Roberto Alomar. But he’s so versatile that when the Cubs traded for second baseman Daniel Murphy, they could easily move Baez to shortstop, where he is also one of the best in the game.

“He sees the entire field,” Murphy said. “He’s able to position guys. He sees things before they happen.”

Patrick Mooney @PJ_Mooney

Joe Maddon runs down why Javier Baez is an MVP contender and ends with this: “It’s hard to evaluate baseball intellect and acumen, but he got a 1600 on his baseball SATs.”

Baez has appeared in major league games at every defensive position except catcher and center field, and truth be told, he could play either of those if needed.

“Going into his senior year in high school, he caught in the fall,” Wilken said. “He might have been one of the best amateur catchers I’ve ever seen. Him and Alex Bregman [of the Astros], because he caught in high school, too.”


If all Baez did was put up those good numbers, play great defense and hit those long home runs, he’d still be a good and popular player. But he wouldn’t be what he is, which is a guy who might help change the way some people think about baseball.

And by some people, think young people.

It’s not just kids who like Baez. Wilken said Baez became his wife’s favorite player and that she quickly identified him as “fearless.” Cubs third base coach Brian Butterfield said his two sons, both in their late 30s, always ask him about Baez.

“They want to know what I think of him,” Butterfield said. “And what I think is always positive.”

But it’s the kids, the younger kids, who most seem to appreciate the flair and the swagger Baez shows on the field.

Every year, the players in the Little League World Series are asked their favorite major league player. This summer, according to MLB.com, 18 of the kids listed Baez. Mike Trout (12) and Mookie Betts (11) were second and third, respectively.

“He’s young and he has that youthful look,” said Ron Coomer, the ex-major league player who works with Pat Hughes on Cubs radio. “He has a youthful way about his game. You can see why kids like to watch him play. And you should hear the screams when he comes to the plate at Wrigley.”

People worry that the game moves too slow for modern tastes, but Baez definitely doesn’t do slow. They worry about a lack of action. He’s always on the move.

“He plays the game the way we all want to play the game,” Murphy said. “You’re supposed to play this game like you’re a kid. And that’s the way he plays.”

Yes, the kids love him.

“I think kids gravitate toward Javy because he’s a big kid, and they can relate to that,” Davis said. “He has fun playing, and the kids see that. He’s good for the game.”

He is good for the game—there’s no doubt about that. He’s the guy baseball can promote, the guy it should want everyone watching this month.

It just needs him to keep doing what he does. Which is good, because that’s all he wants to do.

“I’m just going to keep being me,” Baez said.

And that’s good enough.

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2DYmIpI
via IFTTT