Trevor Lawrence Named Clemson’s Starting QB vs. Syracuse over Kelly Bryant

Timothy Rapp@@TRappaRTTwitter LogoFeatured ColumnistSeptember 24, 2018
Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence (16) warms up before the first half of an NCAA college football game between Georgia Tech and Clemson, Saturday, Sept. 22, 2018, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

Mike Stewart/Associated Press

The Clemson Tigers are making a change at quarterback ahead of their game against Syracuse on Saturday, naming Trevor Lawrence the starting quarterback over Kelly Bryant, per Matt Fortuna of The Athletic.

Head coach Dabo Swinney noted Bryant will be involved in the game plan in some capacity, according to Kevin McGuire of College Football Talk.

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app and get the game.

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BJP chief slammed for calling Bangladeshi migrants ‘termites’

The president of India‘s ruling party has called Bangladeshi migrants “termites”, evoking sharp responses from Dhaka as well as leading rights groups.

In remarks he has repeated at least twice in the last three days, Amit Shah, president of the right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), said millions of “illegal infiltrators” have entered the country like “termites” and should be “uprooted”.

“Should they be thrown out or not? Millions of infiltrators have entered our country and are eating the country like termites. Should we not uproot them?” local media reported Shah as saying at a public meeting in capital New Delhi.

Shah made similar remarks on Friday at an election rally in the western Indian state of Rajasthan.

He said the BJP would deport “every single illegal immigrant” if it wins re-election early next year – a promise the party also made ahead of the 2014 polls.

Shah’s comments, meanwhile, were termed “unwanted” by Bangladesh, which responded by saying since he was not a government official, the remarks do not matter.

“Amit Shah has made an unwanted remark by describing Bangladeshis as termites. We, in Dhaka, do not give any importance to his statement as it does not carry the gravity of an official statement of India,” Bangladesh’s Minister of Information Hasanul Haq Inu told Indian newspaper The Hindu.

In a post on Twitter on Monday, human-rights group Amnesty India said it was “horrified” by Shah’s remarks and urged him not to “dehumanise” people.

“Even before the NRC [National Register of Citizens] process is over, it is horrific to hear Amit Shah dubbing Bangladeshi migrants as ‘termites’. Dear Mr Shah, please STOP dehumanising people, irrespective of them being in the NRC list or not,” Amnesty India tweeted.

Andrew Stroehlein, European media director at the US-based Human Rights Watch, said Shah’s statement was “disturbing” and reminded of a “path to genocide”.

“The president of India’s ruling party crosses a disturbing and well-known line. The path to genocide and other mass atrocity crimes is always first paved by powerful politicians using dehumanising language of “termites”, “cockroaches” or “vermin”,” Stroehlein said on Twitter.

The president of India’s ruling party crosses a disturbing & well-known line.

The path to genocide & other mass atrocity crimes is always 1st paved by powerful politicians using dehumanising language of “termintes”, “cockroaches” or “vermin”.

Always. https://t.co/mKAw56KWHZ pic.twitter.com/aSs4gMyd5p

— Andrew Stroehlein (@astroehlein) September 23, 2018

What is the NRC issue?

While the issue of “illegal migrants”, which in India mainly refers to Bangladeshi Muslims, has remained on the boil since 2014, a controversial NRC draft released in the northeastern state of Assam earlier this year turned it into one of the many polarising topics in Indian politics.

On July 30, the BJP government in Assam published a second and final draft register of the state’s citizens, excluding four million people from the list and sparking fears of mass deportation.

Muslims form one-third of Assam’s population of nearly 33 million.

Unique to Assam, the NRC was first prepared in 1951 to distinguish Indian citizens from undocumented migrants from East Pakistan, which in 1971 became Bangladesh.

The cutoff date to be eligible for an NRC entry was March 24, 1971, as per the 1985 Assam Accord, signed between the Indian government and anti-foreigners agitators.

After Bangladesh seceded from Pakistan, millions of refugees crossed into Assam, bringing the issue of foreigners into national focus.

The migration resulted in violent anti-foreigners protests in Assam in the 1970s and the 80s, killing thousands. In 1983, nearly 2,000 Muslims, including children, were massacred on a single day in Nellie village.

The 1985 accord brought consensus on the eligibility criteria for Indian citizenship.

Critics have compared the move to strip millions of people, mostly Muslims, of their citizenship to the situation in Myanmar, which denies rights and protection to its Rohingya minority.

Incidentally, Shah’s remarks also came ahead of a two-month process, that starts on Tuesday, allowing people left out in the draft NRC to file their claims and objections before a definitive list is released in December.

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Why experts are freaking out over the new way Google Chrome sign-in works

Google latest Chrome update forces  users to login to their Google account.
Google latest Chrome update forces  users to login to their Google account.

Image: Thomas Trutschel/Photothek via Getty Images

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

The internet has erupted over Google’s latest Chrome release — and not in a good way.

With an updated user interface, enhanced password manager, and a slew of other updates, you would assume the latest version of Google’s popular web browser, Chrome 69, would be eliciting some pretty good responses.

But security experts just shined a light on a controversial feature that came with the latest Google Chrome that previously wasn’t announced by the search giant.

A Google Chrome user recently pointed out on Hacker News that Google now forces you to login to your Google account on Chrome if you login to any other Google service using the browser. Logging out of a Google service will also force log you out of Google Chrome.

While there are a number of concerns being leveled at Google here, the issue is essentially two-part. The major issue is the obvious one. Users don’t understand why logging into Gmail, Google Docs, or any other Google service would need to force Google Chrome to also connect to their Google accounts, presumably giving Google access to its browser history, saved passwords, and other personal information. The other issue of focus is Google’s decision to be so quiet about such a major change.

Google’s Adrienne Porter Felt, an engineer and manager for the Chrome browser, took to Twitter to explain a little bit more about the forced login changes. 

Felt, tackling the first main concern, points out that Chrome’s Sync feature, which shares browser information such as history with Google so it can be shared across your devices, is turned off by default. 

Felt also explains that the reason Google decided to make this change was to put an end to any confusion users may have had when trying to sign out of public or shared devices. Basically, Google tied Chrome and Google accounts together so you wouldn’t sign into a service on Chrome and accidentally sync information with someone else’s account.

The new UI clearly reminds you whenever you’re logged in to a Google account. Plus, you now only need to sign out in one place before you share your computer with someone else. 4/

— Adrienne Porter Felt (@__apf__) September 24, 2018

To reiterate, signing in does NOT turn on Chrome Sync. The Chrome Help Center https://t.co/t2pPjiqkVe and Chrome White Paper https://t.co/RFlpiSSs2j have up-to-date details about this change. My colleagues are updating the Chrome privacy notice ASAP to make this more clear 6/6

— Adrienne Porter Felt (@__apf__) September 24, 2018

But a number of security professionals simply weren’t buying it.

Matthew Green, a cryptographer and professor at Johns Hopkins University, wrote a lengthy blog post explaining why this move from Google was enough cause for him to stop using Google Chrome entirely. In his post “Why I’m done with Chrome,” Green points out that a user would have had to be signed into Google Chrome to begin with for this to be a problem needing a fix to begin with. So, why force users to sign in? 

Additionally, Green makes the case that if this was such a positive fix to a major issue, Google would have presented it publicly along with all the other new features and changes. He also points to an issue Mashable has discussed before: dark patterns. With settings options presented by a design and in a language Google sees fit, do Google Chrome users even know what they’re really opting in for if they choose to opt-in to Sync?

Going a step further, security expert Bálint made the case that Google Chrome is essentially a Google service now as opposed to a separate application that can live on its own without being tied to a Google account. The argument here is if you wouldn’t trust Google with your documents, files, or photos due to privacy concerns, then you now can no longer trust Google Chrome with your information either.

The issue here is that there’s no simple fix. Google Chrome is the most popular web browser. According to StatsCounter, Chrome holds nearly 60 percent of the marketshare, so opinions are bound to be all over the place. You can agree with the security experts who find the changes to be a massive privacy issue. You can agree with those who find Google’s new forced login changes to be helpful. There’s certainly truth to both. But there’s no doubt Google self-sabotaged whatever its intentions were by keeping mum about it.

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Watch a mob of golf spectators swarm Tiger Woods as he clinches first win in five years

Tiger Woods is back on top.
Tiger Woods is back on top.

Image: Getty Images

2016%2f09%2f16%2f8f%2fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza3.f09f1By Marcus Gilmer

Tiger Woods, arguably the greatest golfer ever, tasted victory on the PGA Tour for the first time in five years on Sunday.

The victory at the Tour Championship in Atlanta set off a frenzy across the sports world and social media as Woods notched his first win since 2013, an interim in which he underwent multiple back surgeries.

SEE ALSO: Sports Twitter is a fun and weird haven from an often bleak news cycle

But that was nothing compared to the commotion that surrounded Woods as he walked up the fairway at the 18th hole at the East Lake Golf Club with a throng of spectators following closely behind and roaring in approval at his impending victory.

THIS IS AMAZING! Like a scene from a movie.

Fans in Atlanta chant “Tiger! Tiger! Tiger!” as he walks towards the 18th green.

After a 1,876 day wait, Tiger Woods has won a PGA Tour event. His 80th.

🐅🐅🐅pic.twitter.com/f9UElh938C

— Joe Prince-Wright (@JPW_NBCSports) September 23, 2018

There’s no rest for Woods after career win number 80 as he and several other golfers representing the U.S. are already in France, prepping for this week’s Ryder Cup competition

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Delmon Young in Exile in Mexico

He looks enormous, taking batting practice. At 6’4″, there’s a belly on him but plenty of muscle to go with it, a thickness that shows through his green T-shirt, gray shorts and desert-camouflage leggings. He’s bigger than everyone else on the field. When he hits, it sounds like firecrackers going off. The field here in Puebla, Mexico, is standard size for a professional ballpark—325 feet down the lines, 387 in the gaps, 408 in center—but when this man hits, it looks smaller than that.

This is what you see when you encounter Delmon Young, the designated hitter and occasional right fielder for Pericos de Puebla in the Mexican Baseball League. You also see a 33-year-old who isn’t where he’s supposed to be. Fifteen years ago, he was the No. 1 draft pick, and people said he would be to baseball what LeBron James was becoming to basketball. The two athletes’ trajectories couldn’t have been more different. Where James became king of the NBA and a role model, Young was out of baseball by 2015, having earned a reputation for his violent temper. For throwing a bat at a minor league umpire in 2006. For fighting with tourists in New York City in 2012. For fighting with a valet in Miami in 2016. For the hate speech he used while fighting. For throwing away his talent. For being the anti-role model.

But looks are deceiving sometimes, history complicated. After batting practice, Young heads through a door in the back of the dugout, carrying his glove. A gift from an old friend and former teammate—a ballplayer drafted the same year as Young who went on to become what Young might have been. His name is still stitched on the gray leather with red letters. Adam Jones.

Climbing some steps and navigating a narrow hallway, Young passes under a couple of small statues: Virgin Marys, praying from nooks in the bricks, white paint peeling from the walls around them. Young passes a doorway without a door, behind which lies a small room with rusty weights and rickety equipment. After wrestling open a dirty sliding glass door, he walks into another room tucked under a metal staircase and falls onto a beat-up-looking brown leather couch. As we talk about life and baseball in Mexico, Young speaks thoughtfully, with a deep, clear voice. “Hey, it’s baseball,” he says. “Baseball’s pretty fun.”

(Via Getty)

The more you talk with Young and get to know him—and especially the more you talk with other people who know him—it doesn’t take long for the truth about him to become clear. “He fucked up,” says Dr. Marcus Elliott, a friend and the owner of P3, a training center based in Santa Barbara. “There’s no doubt. He should be held accountable. … But it’s all a symptom of a guy who has some hard stuff, some heavy stuff, that he needs to process, and he’s got no way to process it.”


What happened to Delmon Young? How did the LeBron James of baseball fall so far, so hard?

Young grew up about an hour north of Los Angeles, in Camarillo. His father, Larry, was a former pilot in the U.S. Navy who flew fighter jets in the Vietnam War. His mother, Bonnie, was a special needs teacher for a local elementary school. Larry, who later became a commercial pilot, was also a taskmaster when it came to his son’s baseball training. He forced young Delmon to do all manner of baseball drills, to take hundreds of swings every day in a batting cage installed in their backyard. Rain or shine. When Delmon wanted to quit, Larry pushed harder. Treated his son the way drill sergeants had treated him. And if Delmon started feeling good about himself, Larry broke him back down. Same as he’d always done for his older brother, Dmitri, who went on to be the No. 4 overall draft pick in 1991. They called it “Camp Larry.”

Some days, Bonnie stepped in and ended things, ordering Larry to back off. There was no reason to do all that to their sons, she said. Larry would look at Delmon and tell him: “Your mom saved you.”

Matt Slocum/Associated Press

This two-pronged—good cop, bad cop—approach was orchestrated. Calculated. Larry would tell Bonnie that he was “just getting in his face,” and he wanted her to “you know, break it up.” He wanted to prepare Delmon for the world and how the people living in it might treat him. And he wanted Bonnie to remind their boys that they were loved. “I wanted them to know that they had someone to protect them,” Larry recalls.

The effect on Delmon was predictable. His mother, whom he loved dearly, was the one person in the world he trusted completely. Larry says he always loved Delmon, too, of course, but he felt as though Delmon wasn’t comfortable talking with him about more emotional subject matter. Whenever she and Delmon would talk, Larry felt it was best for him to leave the room. “He talked to her about all emotional type things,” Larry says. “He would only talk to me about baseball stuff. But he talked to her about girls and everything. Vulnerable things.”

As Delmon grew, so, too, did his insatiable desire to perform up to expectations.

When he was 13 years old, he began working with Craig Wallenbrock—the same renowned hitting guru now known for making Boston‘s J.D. Martinez one of baseball’s most feared sluggers. Wallenbrock remembers Delmon being a talented and powerful young hitter—but also “tightly wound,” he says. “He was an anxious guy.”

Delmon worked with Wallenbrock until he was 18 years old and got drafted by the then-Tampa Bay Devil Rays in 2003. Then he began following the guidance of coaches on his professional teams.


Delmon’s reputation for having a violent temper began to take hold in 2006. Young was already frustrated by other things. He’d wanted to make the majors by age 20, which didn’t happen. Someone in the Devil Rays front office had told him to be more patient at the plate, so that’s what he was working on that day. And then Delmon, being patient, was rung up on what was, objectively, a terrible call. He turned and yelled at the umpire on his way back to the dugout, and in his anger, he flipped the bat out of his hands. The bat went farther than he thought it would—it struck the umpire in the chest protector.

JOSEPH OLIVER/Associated Press

Delmon was, of course, immediately ejected. Afterward, sitting in the clubhouse, he was horrified, in disbelief at what had occurred. “I didn’t mean to do that,” he kept saying. He called his father, practically in tears. “I didn’t mean to do that.”

When he was suspended 50 games for the incident, he did not contest the ruling. Deeply private by nature, Delmon didn’t want to talk to the media much about it. People close to him wished he would. Dr. Elliott calls this “part of his menace.” Considering the public’s perspective, Elliott says, “It makes these mistakes stick a lot harder than they would on someone else. You don’t have a sense that there’s a person there, you know? Because he doesn’t open up to anyone.”

Public opinion turned on Delmon, and as it did, his reputation started to look unfamiliar to those close to him. Kris Kasarjian, a financial planner in Los Angeles who has been a friend of Delmon’s since they were nine years old, was skeptical about what he saw on television and read in papers and online articles. “The way he’s portrayed is definitely not the Del that we know,” he says. When Kasarjian was in college at UCLA, Delmon had randomly decided to pay off a few thousand dollars’ worth of his parking tickets. And starting in 2006, he let Shawn Riggans—a friend of Delmon’s since his earliest minor league days—and his wife live in a house he owned for two years, rent-free. The whole place to themselves, including internet, cable and a BMW in the garage.


After the 2006 debacle, Delmon seemed eager to prove that he wasn’t who people thought he was. His agent connected him with a sports psychologist, Harvey Dorfman, who Delmon said helped straighten him out, showing Delmon that he was behaving, in Delmon’s words, “like a little kid who wants something bad and doesn’t get it.”

(Via Getty)

Delmon was called up to the majors for good in 2007 and played so well that he was named Rookie of the Year. Delmon continued working with Elliott and his team at P3 during the offseason, driving an hour each way, every day. “He’s showing up consistently. Not missing sessions. Which is kind of unusual for a pro athlete,” Elliott says. “He was committed. And he got really athletic.”

But Elliott also observed firsthand the amount of pressure Delmon put on himself. “He’s wanted it really, really badly,” Elliott says. He watched Delmon struggle with the pressure of what he was supposed to become. “He was tense,” Elliott says. “Not in a way that you felt threatened. Or in a way you felt like he was tense because of you. It was just that he never seemed comfortable in his own skin. … He wasn’t really one to joke about himself. It was kind of off limits. Maybe it was hearing too many critics. Maybe it was his inner critic.”

At the same time, Delmon remained wary of revealing too much of himself. Elliott—as he does with most all of his clients—recommended that Delmon get an EEG reading of his brain. One of the more forward-thinking, unusual tools at P3, an EEG shows people how their brain is functioning by recording and quantifying their brain’s electrical activity. This can help athletes such as Delmon better understand how their brain functions, much like watching video of himself taking batting practice shows him how to improve his swing. But Delmon wanted nothing to do with that. Elliott says, “He said he didn’t want anybody looking in there.”

When the Rays traded him to the Minnesota Twins that offseason, he was thrilled. It seemed as if this might be the fresh start he needed and that his days of having a short fuse might be over. His father, Larry, said at the time, “a light switch came on” and started calling him “the new Delmon.”

(Via Getty)

He had a solid season in 2008, too, batting .290 with 10 home runs, 28 doubles and 69 RBI. But then, Elliott says, somebody with the Twins told Delmon that he needed to bulk up—he needed to hit more home runs.

Looking back now, Elliott says, “I think that was kind of the start of it unraveling. … He went out and had a great year, and he felt like it wasn’t enough.”

So Delmon got bigger. Frustratingly so. “He was a pain in the ass to deal with that year,” Elliott says. “Because he wanted to just get big. … He lost some athleticism. He got really tight through his shoulders.”

Around the same time, Delmon began to withdraw from everyone who had made him who he was, from various friends to—especially—Larry, his father. “Delmon needed to go grow as a person,” Elliott says. “And needed to create separation from his father, like most 15-year-olds do, but he’s trying to do it at 22 or so. He really rejected his father. But that meant he lost his baseball coach while he was trying to become a whole person.”

And then, in late December 2008, Delmon’s mother, Bonnie, started feeling ill. Doctors initially treated her for a bladder infection for a couple of weeks in January, but that didn’t help. On January 23, 2009, Bonnie underwent an endoscopic ultrasonography that revealed a tumor in her pancreas. After doctors at UCLA examined her during the first week of February, they scheduled surgery for Bonnie on February 11.

Delmon had to leave for spring training a week later. He didn’t see her again until May. And by then, Bonnie was all but gone, little more than skin and bones.

“She had lost so much weight,” Larry recalls. “Her face was just bony. … She was swollen from the waist down. She was retaining so much fluid.”

(Via Getty)

Delmon lay on the bed beside Bonnie. Covered his face with his hands. Cried.

“He would go up to his room,” Larry says, “and he would come back, you know, almost a half a day later. And he would look in and see her. He would speak to her. And he’d try to stay in there. And then she would open her eyes for a moment, then she would just close ’em. Like she’d gone back to sleep. Then when she did that, he would leave. He wouldn’t come back.”

Bonnie died in their Camarillo home just a few days after that, on May 18, 2009. The night after her funeral, Delmon flew back to be with his team. “He didn’t have a chance to grieve,” Larry says.


After that, Delmon noticeably changed. He gained more weight. He drank. (“Self-medicated,” says Elliott.) He wasn’t as locked in, mentally. His friends and trainers grew worried. “He was pretty close to the margin of what he could deal with,” Elliott says. “It was just building up—and those things tend to come out.”

Injuries followed. His broken heart seemed to begin taking its toll on his body. Old ankle injuries that he had sustained in high school flared back up again repeatedly. During training sessions at P3, Delmon had to have Elliott and his crew carefully, tightly tape his ankles. “There was really no ankle range of motion,” Delmon says.

And then there was his now-infamous self-destructive, violent behavior. In New York City in April 2012, with the third anniversary of his mother’s death approaching, Young got into a drunken fight with some tourists at 2:30 a.m. and was arrested.

The way reports by outlets such as the New York Times and ESPN put it, Delmon was standing outside of the Hilton New York, not far from Times Square, when he saw four Chicago tourists speaking with a panhandler, who was wearing a yarmulke and Star of David necklace. Delmon started yelling anti-Semitic epithets at them. Police said it’s not clear who Delmon was yelling at, but tensions rose between Delmon and the tourists. Reportedly, Delmon tussled with the tourists on the sidewalk and even tackled one of the men to the ground. They all ended up inside the hotel, police were called and Delmon was taken away.

Richard Drew/Associated Press

People close to Delmon insist that what was reported can’t be the full story of what really happened. Riggans, who was a catcher for the Durham Bulls that night in 2006 when Delmon threw his bat, recalls reading a news report about Delmon’s bad night in New York in disbelief. “It makes it sound that he’s standing outside of the hotel there, sees a group of people and starts yelling at—like come on,” he says. “Bullshit. I’ve known this guy for, gosh—now like 18, almost 20 years. I’ve never—not one time have I ever seen him just start calling somebody out. I’ve never seen him do that. Never. Not once. I can guarantee you, if he’s standing out there in front of the team hotel, that that was not happen—. You don’t just see a group of people in New York City and start yelling at them out of the blue. Let’s be honest.”

Riggans remembers Delmon telling him his side of what happened: “A group of guys came out,” Riggans says. “They were saying stuff to him. They were egging him on and egging him on and egging him on. Obviously there was drinking involved, you know—it was later on at night, early in the morning. They had said a few things to him, and then I’m sure just got to a point where they said one too many things. He ends up getting into it with one of the guys, and that was it.”

He was charged with a hate crime. He would later plead guilty to aggravated harassment for shouting the anti-Semitic slur and tackling the man. He was ordered to complete 10 days of community service and enroll in a restorative justice program that included participating in interactive workshops, videos, guided discussions on issues of prejudice, diversity and tolerance. He also was suspended from playing.

Still, Delmon managed to finish the 2012 season on a good note. The Tigers swept the Yankees in the ALCS and made it to the World Series. Delmon hit .353 with two home runs and six RBI over the four games and was named ALCS MVP. The Associated Press celebrated him as “finally playing up to his vast potential.”

(Via Getty)

After the season, however, Delmon needed surgery on his ankle. He was still in a lot of pain.


As the years passed by, Delmon became increasingly distant from friends and family. He didn’t know how to bridge the gap between the public Delmon Young and the private Delmon Young. How could he do some of the things he’d done and still be a good enough man for Riggans and his wife to make him the godfather to their children? He contained multitudes, and he didn’t particularly like some of the things he was. “That’s been difficult for him, coming to that realization,” says Kasarjian.

In 2013, Delmon moved to Miami—he was back with the Rays—and bought a condo at the Viceroy in Brickell, a neighborhood downtown. He kept the move mostly to himself. Some of his friends didn’t know he’d left until he was gone. Others couldn’t get in touch with him.

Delmon put together some good moments on the diamond, but he struggled to break through the way he felt he should have. “It seemed like he was always battling to get it back, even when he was playing well,” Riggans says. “It was like they always were so quick to just give somebody else another opportunity, and he would just be there in case this didn’t work out, then they’d plug him in. When he would start playing good, well then they’d bring somebody else. That gets frustrating. That really does. You get pissed off … and it can take away from your focus. In Major League Baseball, if you’re not focused on playing the game … that might’ve played a role into how everything ended up playing out.”

Delmon played his final major league season in Baltimore in 2015. He went down to the Dominican Republic during the winter, but the interest in him seemed to be waning. Major league teams didn’t pay him much attention. Then, in February 2016—almost seven years to the exact day that Delmon had found out about Bonnie’s cancer—he seemed to seal his fate when he got drunk and, on his way back to his condo at the Viceroy, allegedly choked and threatened to kill a valet who worked there.

“He doesn’t show vulnerability to anybody,” Elliott says. “And I think that inside, he was crushed, and he was crying.”

Louis Lanzano/Associated Press

After the valet incident—a judge, according to TMZ, dropped the charges after the valet didn’t show for court—Delmon cut off contact with most of his remaining friends. “He shut himself out from everybody,” Kasarjian says.

Larry Young wonders how much he is to blame. He wonders if he pushed his boy too hard when he was young—he wonders if he should have shown him more love. “I don’t know whether he feels that he can open up like that to me, you know?” Larry says. “If he feels vulnerable for something, he’s not gonna say, ‘Dad, I’m nervous about this—I don’t think I can do this’—cuz growing up, I wouldn’t accept that.”

Years ago, Larry told Los Angeles Magazine that he believed “one day, Delmon will understand what I put him through, and he’ll thank me.” And Larry will tell you that Delmon has thanked him. But if you ask Delmon how grateful he feels now, he doesn’t answer the question directly. “Every baseball dad that has a kid in the big leagues did the same stuff,” he says.


Between his arrest in February 2016 and the summer of 2017, Delmon spent a lot of his time holed up in his downtown Miami condo. He lived as many young, single elite athletes worth millions of dollars do. And he spent most of his days sitting by the pool at the Viceroy. “He felt comfortable here,” Riggans says.

Maybe it was distance, or solitude, or something else, Delmon changed during this time.

In July 2017, his phone rang. An old friend asked if he wanted to spend the winter playing for the Melbourne Aces in Australia. “I said sure,” Delmon says. “I didn’t even care what city.”

He got into a routine again as he prepared. Weights in the morning. Drive to Broward County Community College 45 minutes away, and work out with Riggans, an assistant coach there. Then Delmon would go back to Brickell. Relax by the pool. Get dinner at the restaurant downstairs, Cantina La Veinte. Chill there until bed.

(Via Getty)

As Delmon prepared for Australia, his friends say, he seemed to feel pangs of regret for the way he’d cut people out of his life. Before he left, Delmon called Kasarjian. “I’m sorry for the way I’ve treated you guys,” he said. “I know you guys have always had my back and want what’s best for me.”

As they talked more, Kasarjian asked Delmon what had been going on with him.

“I’m a disappointment,” Delmon said. “And I’ve let my dad down.”

“Del,” Kasarjian said, “your dad loves you. He just wants you to be happy and make sure you’re OK. The mistakes are in the past. You’ve got to make sure that, in order to move forward, you’ve got to reach back out to your dad and bring your friends and family back into your life.”


In Melbourne, it seems like Delmon rediscovered the good in people again—and the joy he could find with them. “Since we only played on weekends, you can go kind of explore,” he says. “You live among the people. … And you meet a lot of cool people.”

After Australia, before Puebla, Delmon played for another team in Mexico—Acereros de Monclova—but he didn’t hit well. The team quickly released him, and he went back to California. Back to P3. Back to Craig Wallenbrock.

“I was actually a better hitter in high school than I was in pro ball,” Delmon told him. “I want to get that swing back.”

Wallenbrock noticed something was different about Delmon. “It was much easier to work with him,” Wallenbrock says. “He’s much more relaxed. Much more easygoing. He smiles a lot more.”

(Via Getty)

“He has experienced both success and failure,” Wallenbrock adds. “He’s learning from all the mistakes that he’s made along the way. He has better control of himself—better knowledge of himself.”

Marcus Elliott saw a shift in Delmon’s personality too. He cracked jokes about himself. He was able to joke about his lack of mobility, the tightness of his shoulders and hips and his lack of agility. “He was starting to know himself,” he says, “and be OK with who he was. … It’s almost like he’s gone through counseling.”


It’s too late for Delmon to have the career everyone thought he’d have, but sometimes—even if only for a moment—he can still be the ballplayer he should have been.

On a recent night, the stands were only half-full when Young stepped to the plate in the bottom of the seventh, but the stadium sounded packed. And loud: A band played behind the first-base dugout. Fans clanged and spun various vaguely musical instruments. The announcer egged everybody on. “Mas fuerte! Mas fuerte!” And a parrot mascot danced on the field wearing a shimmering purple cocktail dress. When Young ripped a fastball into left field with his easy, powerful swing, and a runner scored, the fans reacted like he’d won them the World Series. The parrot danced over to Young at first base and rubbed his shoulders.

Sitting on the old brown couch in Puebla’s clubhouse, Delmon says he doesn’t know if he’s trying to make a comeback. “If someone calls, I’ll go,” he says. “Sure. But right now, just down here to play, work on some things, and have fun.”

(Via Getty)

Young finished the regular season batting .335 for Puebla, hitting 11 home runs and producing 56 RBI, third-most in the league and only four fewer than the league leader.

It’s remarkable, the distortion that occurs in the world around him. The way the field looked smaller when he was taking batting practice. The way the couch looks smaller than it really is now. The way the phone in his hand looks like a toy for a baby. His hands are incredible. Enormous, powerful brown hands.

Whenever Puebla’s postseason ends, Delmon’s next stop will be a winter ball league in Venezuela. Those who know the country—and most anyone following global politics lately—know how volatile the situation is down there. Someone mentions this to Delmon. The chaos. The violence. The danger.

Delmon shrugs. “That’s what people say about Mexico.”

Whatever happens, wherever baseball takes him next, he’ll probably go back to California in between, same as he did earlier this summer when he found his best swing again. Back to his father. Back to his childhood home in Camarillo, where he stays when he’s there. Back to the home with the batting cage in the backyard. The home where Bonnie died. Where he still can’t look too closely at his father’s pictures of her.

Brandon Sneed is a writer-at-large for B/R Mag and the author of Head In The Game: The Mental Engineering of the World’s Elite Athletes. His writing has previously appeared in Outside, ESPN The Magazine and more, and has received mention in The Best American Sports Writing. Follow him on Twitter: @brandonsneed.

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Rod Rosenstein heads to White House amid reports he will resign

Rosenstein assumed supervision of the probe after his boss, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, recused himself [Leah Millis/Reuters]
Rosenstein assumed supervision of the probe after his boss, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, recused himself [Leah Millis/Reuters]

US Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who oversees the special counsel investigation into Russia’s role in the 2016 presidential election, is expected to resign or be fired on Monday, according to US media. 

Rosentein was en route to the White House after reports surfaced that he had offered to resign in speculation of being fired. 

Axios, citing an unidentified source with knowledge of the matter, reported that Rosenstein verbally resigned to White House Chief of Staff John Kelly. A second source told the news outlet that Rosenstein is “expecting to be fired” so he plans to step down. 

The Wall Street Journal, citing an individual familiar with the matter, reported that Rosenstein has not submitted his resignation. 

NBC News reported that Rosenstein said he would not resign and the White House would have to fire him.

The reports come as Trump faces mounting pressure from the investigation by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who is looking into Russia’s role in the 2016 presidential election. 

Rosenstein assumed supervision of the investigation after his boss, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, recused himself because of his own contacts with Russia’s ambassador to Washington while serving as a Trump campaign adviser became public. 

There was widespread speculation that Trump would fire Rosenstein after a New York Times report on Friday said in 2017 he had suggested secretly recording Trump and recruiting Cabinet members to invoke a constitutional amendment to remove him from the office. The newspaper said none of those proposals came to fruition. Rosenstein denied the report as “inaccurate and factually incorrect”. 

More soon…

SOURCE: Al Jazeera News

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Rosenstein expects to be fired after report he discussed taping Trump


Rod Rosenstein

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s removal would send shockwaves through the Justice Department and raise questions about the supervision of special counsel‘s Russia investigation. | Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

justice department

Rosenstein was headed to the White House Monday, according to a person familiar with his thinking.

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein headed to the White House Monday and expects to be fired after an explosive report last week that he proposed wearing a wire to record President Donald Trump, according to a person familiar with his thinking.

The New York Times also reported Friday that Rosenstein had discussed invoking the 25th Amendment to remove Trump from office. Rosenstein and his allies have fiercely disputed the account.

Story Continued Below

Rosenstein’s removal would send shockwaves through the Justice Department and raise questions about the supervision of special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and whether any Trump aides helped. Rosenstein has overseen Mueller’s investigation.

The terms of Rosenstein’s possible exit from his job were not immediately clear Monday. The person familiar with his thinking said Rosenstein had not submitted a resignation, but other news organizations reported that he has considered quitting.

Mueller’s office declined to comment Monday. The White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Rosenstein’s exit under pressure if he is fired or quits — just six weeks before the November midterm elections — could signal the president is seeking to curtail the reach of Mueller’s investigation. Rosenstein’s next-closest subordinate, associate Attorney General Rachel Brand, departed the Justice Department earlier this year and has yet to be replaced. That leaves Solicitor General Noel Francisco as the next in line to supervise the Mueller probe.

Trump has long called the investigation a “witch hunt,” but several of his key associates — including former personal lawyer Michael Cohen, former campaign chairman Paul Manafort and longtime Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg — are now cooperating with federal prosecutors in their investigation of the president, his business practices and his 2016 White House campaign.

Rosenstein took on the Mueller probe after Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself last year over concerns that he had misled Congress during his confirmation hearings about his contacts with Russian officials during the campaign.

Since then, Trump has accused Rosenstein, a Republican, of having a conflict of interest in overseeing the investigation because he signed off on a 2016 application to conduct surveillance of former Trump campaign official Carter Page. Trump has also harped on Rosenstein’s authorship of a memo criticizing former FBI director James Comey in 2017, an action that Mueller is now investigating as a potential attempt by the president to obstruct the FBI investigation into his campaign.

“Mueller is most conflicted of all (except Rosenstein who signed FISA & Comey letter),” Trump tweeted in mid-April. “No Collusion, so they go crazy!”

GOP lawmakers have complained that Rosenstein would not hand over some sensitive documents relating to the FBI’s investigation into 2016 election interference, arguing the documents might imperil ongoing law enforcement work. Reps. Mark Meadows (N.C.) and Jim Jordan (Ohio) even filed articles of impeachment in July over the standoff.

Trump allies — from one-time campaign manager Corey Lewandowski to former chief strategist Steve Bannon — have long urged the president to dismiss Rosenstein, who also authorized the raid in April on Cohen’s home, office and hotel room. That move was a prelude to the Trump lawyer pleading guilty this summer to a slate of eight charges of tax evasion, financial fraud and campaign finance violations. Cohen has since met with Mueller’s investigators in a bid to reduce his expected prison sentence.

Rosenstein said in congressional testimony last year that he would refuse to fire Mueller unless the special prosecutor — a former FBI director who worked for both Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama — had engaged in some misconduct.

“I would follow the regulation. If there were good cause, I would act. If there were no good cause, I would not,” Rosenstein told the House Judiciary Committee last December.

To date, Mueller’s investigation has netted guilty pleas from Manafort and his former business partner Rick Gates, ex-Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn and one-time Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos. The special counsel has also indicted a dozen Russian military officials who were accused of hacking into two Democratic Party computer systems to roil the 2016 presidential election.

While the special counsel probe has no deadline, Comey told St. Louis Public Radio earlier this month that Mueller’s cooperation agreement from Manafort “may represent that we’re in the fourth quarter.”

While Trump has agitated for the Mueller probe to shut down, former federal prosecutor David Weinstein said Rosenstein’s possible exit could have unintended consequences.

“A change in supervisors could actually prolong things,” he told POLITICO recently.

Friends of Rosenstein’s say the No. 2 DOJ official has long been prepared to lose his job.

“Rod is not foolhardy. He’s not oblivious. But he also has developed really thick skin about his own job and a very fatalistic approach about his job,” said James Trusty, a former DOJ official who worked under Rosenstein when he was U.S. attorney in Maryland.

Rosenstein’s mantra during the Trump administration, Trusty added, was: “When it happens, it happens. But until it happens, I’m going to do my job.”

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Millie Bobby Brown Ecstatically Rapped ‘Girls Like You’ Onstage With Maroon 5



Getty Images

Right now, it’s very possible that Maroon 5 will perform their Cardi B-featuring, currently No. 2 hit “Girls Like You” at the Super Bowl halftime show in 2019. Reports last week pointed to the band as the show’s featured performers — and now, there’s a rumor about Cardi potentially even getting her own set during the show.

But that’s still over four months away. In the meantime, Adam Levine and co. are out on the road touring behind Red Pill Blues, and at their stop in Nashville on September 23, they welcomed a very special guest to the stage (whose name is not Cardi B): none other than Millie Bobby Brown.

The 14-year-old Stranger Things star popped up right around Cardi’s part to sub in for the rapper, handling the bars herself. She stuck around until the end of the song and even ran down the band’s runway stage to connect with fans.

“soooo 2nite was insane!!!” she wrote on Instagram when she posted the clip. “i love @maroon5 and my dear friend @adamlevine.”

There’s some precedent here: MBB appeared dancing and lip-synching in the band’s “Girls Like You” music video alongside cultural heavy-hitters like Gal Gadot, Tiffany Haddish, Aly Raisman, and so many others. Plus, Brown showed off her bars in the past, via a rapped Stranger Things recap on The Tonight Show last year.

No word yet on whether she’ll make this a permanent thing or reprise her role at the Super Bowl next year. In the meantime, you can relive the action above, then check out both Cardi and Millie in action in the “Girls Like You” music video below.

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WhatsApp hires Grievance Officer to fight deadly fake news in India

WhatsApp is attacking its fake news problem on multiple fronts.
WhatsApp is attacking its fake news problem on multiple fronts.

Image: HAYOUNG JEON/EPA-EFE/REX/SHUTTERSTOCK

2017%2f09%2f19%2ffa%2frakheadshot.f59fbBy Rachel Kraus

In recent months, fake news on WhatsApp in India has inspired citizens to form deadly lynch mobs. Take that in: false articles, spread on WhatsApp, have driven Indian citizens to murder.

To address this startling problem, WhatsApp has created the role of Grievance Officer, according to the Times of India. WhatsApp users can contact the grievance officer to report “complaints and concerns,” including those about fake news.

SEE ALSO: WhatsApp will pay researchers to study its fake news epidemic

It has appointed Komal Lahiri, whose LinkedIn lists her title as senior director, global customer operations and localization, to the role. Lahiri has been with WhatsApp for the past seven months, and with Facebook since August 2014. She will work in the United States. WhatsApp reportedly created the role in August.

Mashable has reached out to WhatsApp to clarify Lahiri’s role — whether she will serve as a compliance officer just for India, or globally. And whether she will lead a new dedicated team to fight fake news in India. We will update this story when and if we hear back.

Fake news, spread on WhatsApp, began sparking lynch mobs in May. False reports about child and organ trafficking resulted in the murder of five people. A government-hired bard of sorts, who was sent into communities to preach caution about false news to the relatively new internet users who are most susceptible, was also murdered. In total, 12 people have been killed.

In the wake of these killings, the Indian government made demands of WhatsApp. During a meeting between Indian PM Ravi Shankar Prasad and WhatsApp CEO Chris Daniels, Prasad said that WhatsApp must have a local presence in India, must comply with Indian laws, and that it must appoint a grievance officer. Lahiri’s appointment comes in response to that request.

The Indian government also asked WhatsApp to help identify the user origin of some messages. But WhatsApp said that it cannot comply with that request because the service is end-to-end encrypted, so it does not have access to that sort of data.

WhatsApp has taken additional internal action to fight its fake news problem. It made changes about forwarding messages to prevent or at least slow the spread of viral news: Forwarded messages are now labeled as such, and forwarding is limited to 20 people at a time. It also commissioned studies about how fake news spread, offering $50,000 to prospective researchers.

WhatsApp is increasingly becoming the leading way that people get their news, especially in the developing world. WhatsApp’s responsibility to educate users, change features, and make dedicated hires will only grow as WhatsApp continues to expand — and drive increased profits for its parent company, Facebook.

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The most popular myths about sex — and the truth you need to know

The internet has changed how kids learn about sex, but sex ed in the classroom still sucks. In Sex Ed 2.0, Mashable explores the state of sex ed and imagines a future where digital innovations are used to teach consent, sex positivity, respect, and responsibility.

Have you ever had a weird question about sex? We want to know about it. Fill out this Google Form and your response may be included (anonymously) in a future story.


If you have played the game telephone, you know what happens to clear information when you’re only allowed to speak about it in whispers: The truth gets jumbled as hell.

Taboos about sex, fears about desire, and squeamishness about discussing our bodies, has led to an abundance of whispers about sex and everything that surrounds it. Those whispers result in some serious misunderstandings, that are sometimes hilarious, and other times dangerous. 

“When adults are silent about sex and sexuality, they leave a massive vacuum for young people,” Lucinda Holt, a sexual education advocate with the educational organizations Answer and Amaze, said. “Kids and teens fill that vacuum with what they hear from their friends and what they stumble on online. If they think sex and sexuality is a topic they can’t ask about, they think it’s a topic where they have to make up information.” 

“Myths wouldn’t be a thing if we made accurate information about sex and sexuality accessible to young people.”

Although scientific understanding about reproduction, birth control, and human sexuality has increased dramatically over the last half a century, some age-old myths persist. Additionally, new trends and technologies have led to a rise in bogus information. And in the U.S. and Canada, there are renewed efforts to squash comprehensive sexual education programs; that is, sex-ed curricula that don’t rely on abstinence-only education, teach consent, and address issues like sexuality and gender identity. Several scientific studies and medical papers have shown that sex ed makes teens more well-equipped to navigate sex and relationships in their present and future. 

SEE ALSO: Abstinence doesn’t work. So why are we telling teens to simply not sext?

“Myths wouldn’t be a thing if we made accurate information about sex and sexuality accessible to young people,” Holt said.

Luckily, there are plenty of resources out there for young people (and inquisitive adults, too) about some of the most common questions, as well as ways to get experts to weigh in on your extremely niche or personal concerns. 

But there are some myths that just won’t quit, and questions that the curious keep asking. Mashable spoke with sex educators, advocates, and medical experts to learn about the most common misconceptions around sex. And these badass truth-tellers quickly got to work debunking our biggest subterranean legends.

Here’s the truth about sex myths and misconceptions you need to know.

1. The ‘You can’t get pregnant “ifs”…

FALSE – this one isn’t hard.

Perhaps the most mythic class of sex myths. Teens (and adults too) have no shortage of questions about what can or cannot cause pregnancy, and what sorts of extenuating circumstances can impact a sperm’s journey to its would-be egg.

“If a penis is in a vagina and ejaculates semen there, no matter where that happens, there’s a chance of pregnancy.”

The list of “ifs” our pros have heard is truly impressive. There’s a whole class related to how water impacts sex, whether you can get pregnant through your other, erm, orifices, or if you do some sort of post-sex dance moves. The list goes on. But the truth is a lot less complicated than the questions, says Jennifer Johnsen, senior director for digital programs and education at Power to Decide, which aims to empower young people to make informed decisions about sex. 

“If a penis is in a vagina and ejaculates semen there, no matter where that happens, there’s a chance of pregnancy,” Johnsen said.

Here are some popular “Can I get pregnant ifs…”

  • Floating semen in a pool or hot tub: No! Our experts say there is no way for an errant water-bound semen to swim its way into a vagina.

  • Oral sex: No! Ingesting sperm cannot lead to pregnancy.

  • If someone ejaculates anywhere except in or very close to a vagina: No! Sperm cannot grab a bus pass to a woman’s cervix.

  • From pre-cum: Pre-cum, or the small amounts of ejaculate that a man can emit during sex but before ejaculation, does contain sperm. So getting pregnant from pre-cum is possible — but unlikely — if you’re having unprotected sex, but a man doesn’t ejaculate inside the vagina. Pulling out before ejaculation is almost as effective as the typical use of a condom, said Nadine Thornhill, a sexual education advocate and educator.  

And here’s the flipside. You can get pregnant despite all of these things:

  • You have sex in a jacuzzi or hot shower: Yes you can get pregnant. Water, heat, or chlorine will not neutralize or wash out sperm.

  • It’s your first time: Yes, you can get pregnant if it’s your first time.

  • You’re having sex on your period: This is unlikely because ovulation usually occurs in the two weeks after your period. But it is still possible.

  • If you stand up after sex: You can still get pregnant. Standing up after someone ejaculates inside of you will not stop sperm from doin’ their thing.

  • If you shower or wash after sex: same as standing up.

  •  If you have not had your first period yet: This is incorrect. That’s because you ovulate for the first time before your first period. So if you have sex before your first period, there is  a small chance that you could become pregnant.

That’s the bottom line, folks.

2. An unplanned pregnancy means you’ll be scarred for life: 

FALSE – It’s personal.

Speaking of pregnancy, there is a perception our experts have encountered that if you do become pregnant, it is an earth-shattering, life-destroying event. And certainly, the choice of what to do after becoming pregnant is a big one that can impact people in a multitude of ways.

“It can be a moment of crisis in their life, and that’s something that we’re experts in helping folks go through,” said Courtney Benedict, associate director of medical standards implementation at Planned Parenthood Federation of America. “But not all people feel that way.”

It’s important for women who become pregnant to know that they have lots of options. And, crucially, it’s something many people have been through before, and from which they have moved on.

“About 45 percent of pregnancies are not planned at that time,” Jennifer Johnsen said. “Unwanted pregnancies are a very common occurrence for someone to experience in their lifetime. People don’t necessarily understand that. Whatever shade of negativity somebody might feel, people should have the perspective that it’s really a common thing to happen. And hopefully that will bring down the level of taboo in our society.”

3. There’s no male birth control

FALSE

It’s true, a male pill is still in the works. But men actually have one of the safest and most accessible forms of birth control easily at their disposal: the beautiful, flexible, STI-and-pregnancy preventing … condom!

4. Condoms aren’t effective

FALSE

A ripped condom is the center of so many rom-com plot lines that some people approach our rubber friends with skepticism. That perception is also exacerbated by some abstinence only sex-ed programs, that falsely claim that condoms don’t work, Holt said.

Condoms are 98 percent effective at preventing pregnancy. 

Condoms are 98 percent effective at preventing pregnancy. And they’re also the only method of birth control that also protects against most sexually transmitted infections (STIs).

“We know that abstinence-only programs will often claim that condoms are not effective, or they will use an efficacy rate that’s lower than the actual efficacy rate,” Holt said. “When you do this, then young people think, why should i do this if it doesn’t even work. In fact, if used regularly and effectively, they prevent pregnancy and STI. And it’s the one thing that’s going to reduce your risk of an STI if you’re going to have sex.”

Don’t buy any of these excuses if some partner is trying to wriggle out of wearing one:

  • You need to find the right size: A basic condom can stretch over someone’s forearm without breaking. Certainly, condoms should be comfortable, but there is no need to buy into magnum marketing ploys (or excuses). Most condoms should fit most penises.

  • You need a brand name: People are sometimes skeptical of free condoms or non-brand name condoms. In reality, a condom is a condom. Some might have fancier flavors or lubes, but there is no such thing as a “crappy condom.”

People are also still somewhat confused about how to use condoms. Here’s the golden rule: Use one condom, no more, no less, to have safe sex. Here are some very wrong myths:

  • You can reuse them: No! Condoms are single-use items.

  • Doubling up is a good idea: No! Two heads may be better than one, but two condoms for one head means slip/rip/tear city.

  • You can use other condom-like items in a pinch: No! Put away the saran wrap and sandwich bags. Only actual condoms will effectively prevent pregnancy.

You got that, people?!

5. Having HPV as a man is no big deal

FALSE

Our experts said that a lot of misinformation persists around many STIs; Holt said that often, people just don’t think that STIs will happen to them. 

One of the STIs that causes the most confusion is HPV, Planned Parenthood’s Benedict said. And that’s understandable. HPV is a virus that technically has no cure. There are many strains of this virus. It is sometimes asymptomatic, and there’s no way to test for it in men. And though there is a preventative vaccine for some of the most harmful, cancer-causing iterations of the virus, a person’s immune system — not an external treatment — is what’s responsible for suppressing it.

So if you’re a man, HPV might not seem like such a big deal. Sometimes HPV can cause genital warts in both men and women. But if it’s a virus that often has no symptoms, and there’s no test and no cure, what’s there to worry about, anyway? 

In fact, if a man learns that he may have HPV, he should tell his partners, whether he has sex with men or women. HPV can cause cervical cancer, and in rare cases, throat, and anal cancer. Men can also get an HPV vaccine, which would really just be better for everyone, now wouldn’t it. 

6. Hormonal birth control is bad for you

FALSE – It’s safe, but a personal choice.

Experts report that concerns about hormonal birth control, like the pill, the patch, or hormonal IUDs, persist despite the fact that the pill is one of the most studied, and proven medications of all time. 

All of these experts stress that birth control is a personal choice, and that women should choose the method they feel most comfortable with. However, misinformation and “toxin free” movements are contributing to birth control myths. 

“If someone does not want to take exogenous hormones, there are plenty of other methods,” Planned Parenthood’s Benedict said. “But truly, hormonal contraception has been around for decades. The safety and efficacy is very well established.”

Despite the proven effectiveness and safety that our experts referenced, here are myths and concerns about hormonal birth control:

  • It causes weight gain: There is no evidence that the most common types of hormonal birth control cause weight gain. In fact, there are some reports that link it to weight loss. But weight fluctuation is a normal bodily occurrence, and it is hard to link one way or the other.

  • It can increase your risk for breast cancer: The “slightly increased” risk of breast cancer is so small that it does not prevent doctors from prescribing hormonal birth control even to women with a history of breast cancer in their families. What hormonal birth control can do is reduce the risk of some cancers, like ovarian cancer.

  • It can harm your ability to get pregnant after you come off of the pill: There is no evidence of that taking the pill even for long amounts of time has any effect on a woman’s ability to become pregnant once she stops taking it and her body resumes a non-hormonally regulated cycle.

  • Having a hormonally regulated cycle is worse than having a natural cycle: This is a personal choice, but there is no scientifically proven negative consequence to regulating your period. Additionally, using the pill doesn’t pump your body full of “toxins” as some anti-birth control posts on Instagram purport. “The hormones in these methods are very similar to hormones that we make within our body,” Benedict said. “We’re basically just telling the ovaries, stay quiet, no need to release an egg. And there’s nothing that’s not safe about not ovulating.”

What’s getting lost in a lot of the fear about birth control is all of the benefits. It can reduce cramps, cause more regular periods, or cause periods to go away — which, according to science, is perfectly healthy. 

“The pill is one of the most studied medicines of all time,” Johnsen said. “People should choose their birth control based on what they’re comfortable with. For people who don’t want to use hormones, there are plenty of other methods. But regarding the idea that you need a break from hormonal birth control, or that using hormonal birth control continuously to skip your period is dangerous, there is a large body of medical research that shows for most people, it’s a perfectly safe and effective way to prevent pregnancy.”

7. Teenagers are rabid sex monsters

FALSE – arousal is different from desire.

It’s true that teenagers may have hormonal levels with more extreme highs than people in adulthood. But the new and at times elevated levels of hormones don’t mean that all teenagers are horn dogs who can’t keep their hands off one another.

“Teens may have an arousal response that is higher than other stages than life,” sex educator and advocate Thornhill said. “But arousal is not necessarily the same thing as desire. And just because someone is sexually aroused, it doesn’t mean they want to have sex with another person. It just means they’re responsive to stimuli. There’s an interest in sex, but it’s not this uncontrollable animalistic urge that cannot be tamed and controlled.”

8. Men and women have “sexual peaks” at different ages

FALSE – what the heck is a ‘peak’ anyway?

A myth has persisted for years that men have a “sexual peak” in their teenage years and women “peak” in their mid-thirties. This is untrue in a few ways.

“A sexual peak is a bit absurd on the face of it because everyone’s experiences are so unique”

“There’s no biological determinant on age,” Johnsen said. “That’s just not the case.”

The first hole in this myth comes from the word “peak”: What is a peak anyway? This myth likely originated from the Kinsey research about sexuality in the middle of the 20th century, Johnsen said. That study actually counted up how many orgasms people were having at different ages. Other research has quantified how hormone levels change throughout a person’s life and determined that a “sexual peak” is the time during which a person has the highest levels of hormones in their body. Hormone levels naturally fluctuate in accordance with puberty and age, but also with totally variable experiences like life stressors or major events like pregnancy. So the very idea of a “peak” is a wishy-washy one.

The second problem is that the question of “peaks” depends so much on personal life experience. 

“A sexual peak is a bit absurd on the face of it because everyone’s experiences are so unique,”Johnsen said. “People experience pleasure in ways that are not necessarily tied to orgasms. The notion that you would tie those numbers to a sexual peak almost sets people up for disappointment.”

9. Consent is just about sex

FALSE – consent is a topic that translates to many areas of life

Many sex-ed advocates say that one of the best ways to ensure a comprehensive sexual education, and therefore healthier relationships, is by beginning sex-ed early — as early as pre-school.

That might sound wild, but what sex-ed looks like for a teenager would be very different from the lessons that young children would learn. For example, early sex-ed would involve lessons about communication and boundaries. Learning to express  and honor other people’s needs is something children can learn at a young age, and is also a lesson that will benefit them down the line.

“One of the misconceptions is that consent is just about sex,” Thornhill said. “Really consent is a much broader social lesson about respecting other people’s space and bodies. It’s about really letting people decide for themselves how they want to receive affection, and love.”

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