Chris Perkins: Dolphins drafted the best players available instead of filling needs. Stay tuned …
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:18:51 GMT
So, now the Dolphins are even more loaded at cornerback, a position they already had lots of talent, and they remain suspect at positions such as tight end, right tackle and left guard. This is the offshoot of the Dolphins selecting South Carolina cornerback Cam Smith with their second-round pick Friday night.You could say the same about the running back position after the Dolphins selected Texas A&M’s Devon Achane with their third-round pick.These selections were the so-called BPA — Best Player Available — as opposed to picking for need.Sometimes BPA is a welcome approach. On Friday, it was a head-scratcher — according to fans on social media.But not to the Dolphins. They’re clear and resolute in the reasons for their selections. They want talent, regardless of position.“You always try to position yourself [to] go into the draft to be able to take the best player, regardless of position,” coach Mike McDaniel said. “Sometimes you h...Alabama’s Steen (Eagles), Battle (Bengals) go in third round, are St. Thomas Aquinas’ 34th and 35th NFL draft picks
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:18:51 GMT
Alabama’s Tyler Steen, a 6-foot-6, 321-pound tackle, was picked 65th by the defending NFC-champion Philadelphia Eagles in the 2023 NFL draft on Friday night.Thirty selections later, Crimson Tide teammate Jordan Battle was snapped up at No. 95 by the Cincinnati Bengals.The pair of transactions gave Fort Lauderdale’s St. Thomas Aquinas its 34th and 35th NFL draft picks.Steen, a tackle, finished off his college career with the Crimson Tide after starting off at Vanderbilt.Between the two SEC programs, he has experience at both right and left tackle. Steen started his college career playing defensive tackle for the Commodores, although he was an offensive line recruit at Aquinas.Battle had six interceptions and a national title in his four seasons for the Crimson Tide, he offers the size and speed to play safety at the next level. ()Chicago White Sox continue their worst start since 1950, losing to the Tampa Bay Rays 3-2
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:18:51 GMT
There was a brutal defensive mistake, a home run, a hit-by-pitch and an ejection — all in the first inning.There was a little bit of everything Friday at Guaranteed Rate Field — except a Chicago White Sox victory.The Sox dropped their ninth straight, losing 3-2 to the Tampa Bay Rays in front of 16,681. They are 13 games under .500 at 7-20. The Sox continued their worst start to a season since 1950, when they also were 7-20.The Rays went ahead in the ninth on a solo homer from Isaac Paredes against reliever Kendall Graveman.“It’s tough,” Graveman said. “I have to do my job tonight. Battled our tails off to get to that point. Team is fighting and didn’t think I necessarily executed bad. But he was better than me in that moment. Tip your hat to him. But at the end of the day this comes down to results.“I mean, it don’t matter about execution. You make a great pitch and not get the results you want, or you can make a terrible pitch a...Editorial: With dismal record, Biden limps into re-election campaign
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:18:51 GMT
President Joe Biden formally announced his re-election bid this week. The nation reacted with a collective yawn.Biden’s four years have been marked by a cynicism unusual even in the hard-scrabble world of politics. He campaigned as a moderate Democrat, but he has governed as an acolyte of socialist Bernie Sanders. He ran four years ago as a healer who would unify a divided nation. Yet he has delivered entire speeches dedicated to demonizing his political opponents.Not since Jimmy Carter in 1980 has an incumbent president had such a dismal record on which to campaign.Inflation reached a 40-year high on Biden’s watch, imposing a punishing tax on the poor and middle class. It remains well in excess of recent norms. The White House economics team spent months dismissing the possibility of persistent rising prices despite being warned that massive spending bills could overheat the economy. Too many Americans sit on the sideline rather than enter the job market.Gasoline and energy prices ...Dear Abby: Abuse survivor turns to food for comfort
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:18:51 GMT
Dear Abby: In many ways, I am blessed. I have an amazing family, a great husband and a well-paying job that I enjoy. My only problem is, I hate myself. I hide my pain with humor (I’m pretty funny). I have some childhood sexual abuse trauma and have had a lot of counseling. I’m hesitant to blame my current issues on something that happened so long ago, but why can’t I get my life together? I’m so happy now, so why is this dragging me down?I combat my inner pain, stress and hate by eating. I cannot stop. I have gained so much weight it is hard to do normal activities. I am tired, disgusted and ashamed of being so out of control. None of my clothes fit. Every social situation is unbelievably overwhelming. I have tried diet after diet. Some work, but nothing sticks long term. I have removed all the mirrors in my house so I won’t have to look at myself.My family and friends are amazing, loving and supportive. My world would be nothing without them. How can I...Facing revolt, GOP spares ethanol in drive to cut spending
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:18:51 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — House Republicans are touting their debt limit package as a first step toward fiscal restraint, saying it’s past time for Congress to reduce the swelling deficits that they warn are threatening the fiscal health of the country. But when a group of Midwestern Republicans went marching this week into the office of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, it wasn’t spending cuts they wanted to talk about. They were on a mission to preserve billions of dollars in federal support for biofuels and ethanol.The bloc of lawmakers, with Iowa’s four Republicans at its core, forced McCarthy to make revisions to the legislation in the hours before it headed to a floor vote, even after the speaker had insisted changes were off the table. The concession amounted to a $38.6 billion carve-out to safeguard the incentives for biofuels, carbon capture projects and the ethanol industry, and helped the bill pass by a narrow 217-215 margin.The episode highlighted how, even as Republicans decr...Zooey Zephyr row spotlights rise of GOP far-right caucuses
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:18:51 GMT
BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — The banishment of transgender lawmaker Zooey Zephyr from Montana’s House floor has showcased the rising power of hard-line conservatives — organized under the banner of the State Freedom Caucus Network — who are currently leveraging divisive social issues to gain influence in 11 statehouses.In Montana, they led the charge to enshrine a ban on gender-affirming care for minors that the governor signed Friday. In South Carolina, they slowed the budget process this year with failed amendments to punish universities with diversity programs. And in Wyoming, they tried to make certain library books “crimes of obscenity.”Across the country with varying levels of success, the groups have followed the playbook of the House Freedom Caucus, an eight-year old alliance of GOP conservatives determined to pull Republicans in the U.S. Congress to the right.After debuting on the second anniversary of the January 6 siege on the U.S. Capitol, the Montana Freedom Caucus’ 21 ...Georgia’s Kemp veers from Trump, but state GOP not moving on
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:18:51 GMT
BUFORD, Ga. (AP) — A slate of Georgia Republicans led by Gov. Brian Kemp handily won reelection last year over far-right primary opponents endorsed by Donald Trump and backed by the state party chairperson, showing the limits of the former president and his 2020 election lies in the critical swing state.Despite those stinging primary losses, the state GOP is showing little interest in moving on from Trump.Last weekend, Republicans in Georgia’s 1st Congressional District, which includes Savannah, elected as its chair Kandiss Taylor, a Kemp gubernatorial challenger who ran on a “Jesus Guns Babies” platform and denies the legitimacy of her primary defeat. In metro Atlanta’s 6th Congressional District, Republican activists considered a resolution rejecting the results of the 2020 election and declaring Democrat Joe Biden the “acting” president.“In many ways, the Georgia Republican Party is a train that has left Crazytown, and the governor is trying to present a scenario and ...Presidential battleground states weigh more election funding
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:18:51 GMT
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Ahead of the 2024 presidential election, officials in several battleground states have proposed boosting funding to add staff, enhance security and expand training within election offices that are facing heavier workloads and heightened public scrutiny.The potential extra funding comes as many election offices are grappling with a wave of retirements and a flood of public records requests, stemming partly from lingering election distrust seeded by former President Donald Trump in his 2020 defeat. In South Carolina, host of one of the earliest presidential primaries, almost half of county election directors have resigned in the last two years, said state Election Commission Executive Director Howard Knapp.The unprecedented turnover has created an “enormous knowledge and competency gap,” Knapp said, prompting a budget request for millions of additional state dollars to boost staffing and training. Without the funds, Knapp warned the gap will grow and elections wi...Frustration grows over wait on OxyContin maker’s settlement
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:18:51 GMT
More than a year after OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma reached a tentative settlement over the toll of opioids that was accepted nearly universally by the groups suing the company — including thousands of people injured by the drug — money is still not rolling out.Parties waiting to finalize the deal are waiting for a court to rule on the legality of a key detail: whether members of the Sackler family who own the company can be protected from lawsuits over OxyContin in exchange for handing over up to $6 billion in cash over time plus the company itself.This week — days before the one-year anniversary of the April 29, 2022, appeals court arguments on the matter — lawyers told judges that the wait is causing problems.Lawyers on multiple sides of the case, including those representing Purdue, asked the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York to issue a ruling or provide an update soon, saying the efforts to use the funds to fight the opioid crisis can’t begin until the money ...Latest news
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