World Champs: Hyde 6th in 400m hurdles final Loop Jamaica

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The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
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Jamaica’s Jaheel Hyde ran a personal best of 48.03s in the 400m hurdles final in which he finished 6th at the World Athletics Championship in Eugene, Oregon. (Photo: Marlon Reid)

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Jaheel Hyde placed sixth in the men’s 400m hurdles final at the World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Oregon on Tuesday night.

Hyde ran a personal best of 48.03s in the process.

The race was won by Brazil’s Allison Dos Santos in a Championships record of 46.29s.

Rai Benjamain of the United States was second in a season’s best 46.89s with Trevor Bassitt, also of the United States claiming the bronze in a personal best 47.39s.

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World Champs: Fraser-Pryce blasts Oregon22 schedule Loop Jamaica

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The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

EUGENE, Oregon: Iconic Jamaican sprinter Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce has described the schedule of the World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Oregon as “definitely crazy.”

Jamaica’s favourite 35-year-old mom, who on Sunday sped her way back to the top of the sprint game by winning her fifth world title in the 100m, has already completed five rounds over five days in track and field’s largest event outside of the Olympics.

“The schedule is crazy and I would like to say bias as well,” said Fraser-Pryce after powering home in a season’s best 21.82 seconds in a semifinal race on Tuesday night to qualify for Thursday’s 200m final.

“The men ran before us then got a one-day break. They came back yesterday [Monday] and they started before us. We went after them and today [Tuesday] we went before them and we got a rest day and they also got a rest day,” explained the country’s most-celebrated 100m runner outside of Usain Bolt.

The men’s 100m was completed on the second day of the competition. After a rest day on the third day of competition, the men returned on day four for the opening round of the 200m. The men returned Tuesday’s fifth day of competition for the semifinals.

The women’s 100m got off on day two and took place before the semifinals of the men’s 200m.

After Fraser-Pryce led Jamaica to sweep the 100m medals on day three she was back on the field the next day for the first round of the 200m.

“I am tired because you get no rest after the 100,” said Fraser-Pryce. “You have to come back and run a round yesterday [Monday] and another today [Tuesday] and for me, it definitely takes a toll because I am older than most of the girls so my recovery takes a little bit longer.”

Despite the hectic schedule, Fraser-Pryce said she was able to execute a good 200m race today.

“I think I am pleased especially with the first 150m, just making sure that I was able to get out because I know the ladies behind are capable of running 21.2s and I didn’t want to give myself too much work because I am not a really a closer,” she said.

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Three men fatally shot by cops in St Elizabeth Loop Jamaica

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The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
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Three men were fatally shot and three firearms seized by the police during an alleged confrontation in the town of Speculation in Black River, St Elizabeth late Tuesday afternoon.

The police told Loop News that the men were intercepted by the police after they allegedly attempted to carry out a robbery in the area about 4:45pm.

Up to late Tuesday, evidence was still being gathered at the scene.

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Santokhi mag blij zijn met protest

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Perle Lama, Axel Tony, Stony et Admiral T inaugurent « Calence Live » aux Trois-Îlets

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World Champs: Hampered Dwyer misses 200m final Loop Jamaica

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The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News
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Rasheed Dwyer finished eighth in his 200m semifinal run and failed to advance to the final. He had been experiencing hamstring issues ahead of the race. (Photo: Marlon Reid)

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Jamaica will not be represented in the final of the men’s 200m at the Eugene World Athletics Championships.

The country’s lone representative in the semifinals, Rasheed Dwyer, finished eighth in his semifinal and failed to advance.

Dwyer, who was experiencing issues with his hamstring before the race, could only manage a time of 20.87s.

The race was won by 18-year-old sprinting sensation, the American Erriyon Knighton in 19.77s, followed by Canada’s Aaron Brown in 20.10s.

Earlier, Yohan Blake was forced to withdraw from his semifinal with a swollen right Achilles. He is expected to represent Jamaica in the 4x100m relay.

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House passes same-sex marriage bill in retort to high court Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

The US House overwhelmingly approved legislation Tuesday to protect same-sex and interracial marriages amid concerns that the Supreme Court ruling overturning Roe v Wade abortion access could jeopardise other rights criticized by many conservatives.

In a robust but lopsided debate, Democrats argued intensely and often personally in favour of enshrining marriage equality in federal law, while Republicans steered clear of openly rejecting gay marriage.

Instead, leading Republicans portrayed the bill as unnecessary amid other issues facing the nation.

Tuesday’s election-year roll call, 267-157, was a partly political strategy, forcing all House members, Republicans and Democrats, to go on the record.

It also reflected the legislative branch pushing back against an aggressive court that has raised questions about revisiting other apparently settled US laws.

Wary of political fallout, GOP leaders did not press their members to hold the party line against the bill, aides said. In all, 47 Republicans joined all Democrats in voting for passage.

“For me, this is personal,” said Representative Mondaire Jones, D-NY, who said he was among the openly gay members of the House.

“Imagine telling the next generation of Americans, my generation, we no longer have the right to marry who we love,” he said. “Congress can’t allow that to happen.”

While the Respect for Marriage Act easily passed the House with a Democratic majority, it is likely to stall in the evenly split Senate, where most Republicans would probably join a filibuster to block it.

It’s one of several bills, including those enshrining abortion access that Democrats are proposing to confront the court’s conservative majority.

Another bill, guaranteeing access to contraceptive services, is set for a vote later this week.

House GOP leaders split over the issue, with Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Whip Representative Steve Scalise voting against the marriage rights bill, but the No 3 Republican Representative Elise Stefanik of New York voting in favour.

In a notable silence, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell declined to express his view on the bill, leaving an open question over how strongly his party would fight it if it should come up for a vote in the upper chamber.

Key Republicans in the House have shifted in recent years on the same-sex marriage issue, including Representative Liz Cheney of Wyoming, who joined those voting in favour on Tuesday.

Said another Republican, Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina, in a statement about her yes vote: “If gay couples want to be as happily or miserably married as straight couples, more power to them.”

Polling shows a majority of Americans favour preserving rights to marry, regardless of sex, gender, race or ethnicity, a long-building shift in modern mores toward inclusion.

A Gallup poll in June showed broad and increasing support for same-sex marriage, with 70% of US adults saying they think such unions should be recognized by law as valid.

The poll showed majority support among both Democrats (83%) and Republicans (55%).

Approval of interracial marriage in the US hit a six-decade high at 94% in September, according to Gallup.

Ahead of Tuesday’s voting, a number of lawmakers joined protesters demonstrating against the abortion ruling outside the Supreme Court, which sits across from the Capitol and remains fenced off for security during tumultuous political times. Capitol Police said among those arrested were 16 members of Congress.

“The extremist right-wing majority on the Supreme Court has put our country down a perilous path,” said Representative Mary Gay Scanlon, D-Pa, in a floor speech setting Tuesday’s debate in motion.

“It’s time for our colleagues across the aisle to stand up and be counted. Will they vote to protect these fundamental freedoms? Or will they vote to let states take those freedoms away?”

But Republicans insisted the court was only focused on abortion access in June when it struck down the nearly 50-year-old Roe v Wade ruling, and they argued that same-sex marriage and other rights were not threatened.

In fact, almost none of the Republicans who rose to speak during the debate directly broached the subject of same-sex or interracial marriage.

“We are here for a political charade, we are here for political messaging,” said Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee.

That same tack could be expected in the Senate.

Senator Josh Hawley, R-Mo, said, “The predicate of this is just wrong. I don’t think the Supreme Court is going to overturn any of that stuff”.

As several Democrats spoke of inequalities they said they or their loved ones had faced in same-sex marriages, the Republicans talked about rising gas prices, inflation and crime, including recent threats to justices in connection with the abortion ruling.

For Republicans in Congress, the Trump-era confirmation of conservative justices to the Supreme Court has fulfilled a long-term GOP goal of revisiting many social, environmental and regulatory issues the party has been unable to tackle on its own by passing bills that could be signed into law.

The Respect for Marriage Act would repeal a law from the Clinton era that defines marriage as a heterogeneous relationship between a man and a woman.

It would also provide legal protections for interracial marriages by prohibiting any state from denying out-of-state marriage licenses and benefits on the basis of sex, race, ethnicity or national origin.

The 1996 law, the Defence of Marriage Act, had basically been side-lined by Obama-era court rulings, including Obergefell v Hodges, which established the rights of same-sex couples to marry nationwide, a landmark case for gay rights.

But last month, writing for the majority in overturning Roe v Wade, Justice Samuel Alito argued for a more narrow interpretation of the rights guaranteed to Americans, noting that the right to an abortion was not spelt out in the Constitution.

In a concurring opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas went further, saying other rulings similar to Roe, including those around same-sex marriage and the right for couples to use contraception, should be reconsidered.

While Alito insisted in the majority opinion that “this decision concerns the constitutional right to abortion and no other right,” others have taken notice.

“The MAGA radicals that are taking over the Republican Party have made it abundantly clear they are not satisfied with repealing Roe,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., referring to Trump’s backers.

He pointed to comments from Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, who said over the weekend that the Supreme Court’s decision protecting marriage equality was “clearly wrong” and state legislatures should visit the issue.

But Schumer did not commit to holding a vote on the marriage bill.

By Lisa Mascaro

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