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Former star receiver Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson had his secret formula for staying healthy re-revealed during a podcast appearance last week. While hoping on the “7PM in Brooklyn,” which had been released on Thursday, the hosts played an old clip of Johnson discussing how he used to “collect warm urine from my teammates, heat it up and put my ankle in it for 30 minutes” to fend off ankle sprains. Upon hearing the comments, which had originally made back in 2016, Johnson reiterated how helpful that method had been. “Yeah, that worked,” he said during the recent podcast appearance. “There’s a reason I never been injured — home remedies. ... I’m sitting here living proof,” he said. Johnson only missed 10 games over the course of his 11-year career in the NFL, which included 10 seasons with the Bengals. The wide receiver, who recorded 766 catches, 11,059 yards and 67 touchdowns, said that his grandmother was the one who gave him the idea and that it wasn’t hard to get his teammates to help. “It’s a good thing,” he said. “This is how I was able to collect it all at one time, right? You got team meetings in the morning, right? Everybody. ‘Hey y’all, boy, do me a favor, boy. My ankle kind of f–ked up, I need you to all y’all to drink water at one time. “So, when we break meeting, if y’all pee it’s a bucket in the bathroom.’ Boom. Y’all all peeing that bucket for me.” Johnson has been eligible for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. His final season in the NFL came in 2011 when he played for the Patriots making 15 catches for 276 yards and one touchdown. Johnson made three starts and 15 appearances in his single season in New England.
Donald Trump and the intellectuals: How do we navigate the darkness ahead?
The latest news from down under is rather baffling. The Online Safety Amendment (Social Media Minimum Age) Act 2024 passed by the Australian Senate last week seeks to ban children below the age of 16 from using social media apps like TikTok, Facebook, Reddit, Snapchat, Instagram and X. While it might take about a year for the new law to fall in place, the debates have already started raging. TikTok, one of the channels to be affected by the ban, purportedly aimed at protecting children, has warned of serious ramifications. It would push children to the darker corners of the internet, it said. The channel has been completely banned in India since 2020. Many other countries already have different types of restriction on its use, including Australia where the app cannot be used in government devices. So the latest ban for children below 16 is only a natural corollary to the way TikTok has been perceived there all along. But what makes skeptics laugh over the ban is the feasibility of its implementations though that should not be a reason for withholding the imposition of reasonable restrictions on anything, including social media that has been taking human society on a different kind of rollercoaster ride of late. In India, where a random politician or bureaucrat is definitely capable of conjuring up such a ban for children, claiming that the younger generation was going to the dogs mainly because of their addiction to social media, it would be really interesting to watch the game unfold in reality if at all it happens. Because in the Indian context, 70 per cent of the children access social media from their parents’ phones. And 80 per cent of the parents navigate online only with the help of their children. To put it otherwise, not many children below the age of 16 have the privilege of owning and using mobile phones on their own volition. Even in other countries, including Australia, there is no technologically sound age verification method to weed out juveniles from the highly cacophonous social media crowd. Also to be honest, by removing persons below 16 years of age from their roster, the social media channels will stand to lose most of its ardent and regular users. While it is not known if the ramifications of having only people above 16 years on the roll call will reflect on the balance sheet of the companies that own the apps, most of the apps, other than a few popular early channels, might have very few users left. True it is preposterous to break our heads over social media, which actually has no positive role on human existence or on the overall development of society. Yet, since social media has intertwined with our lives, we cannot completely ignore its presence if we aspire to have a meaningful and informed existence. So even if we have lived complete lives before the advent of social media or smartphones or even mobile phones, the latest technological advances that have changed the way we communicate cannot be just overlooked. So, to see social media as a bane for children – children alone – is nothing but childish because the evolution of the social media itself was around the younger generation with its new value systems, aspirations and outlooks. Children should only be allowed to seamlessly integrate with the system and not sought to be segregated till they reached a particular age. Monitoring the use of smartphones and parental restrictions on social media is one thing but a government law to bar them from accessing social media is another thing. I am not sure if the Australian government has any statistics to prove that social media’s dark side has the potential to ruin young lives more than that of older people. Or has it found out that excessive use of social media has caused physical and health challenges to children more than adults? Or has it been proved that young impressionable minds could be negatively influenced by social media than grown up people? Empirical evidence might prove that adult lives, too, are jeopardized by social media as much as that of children. For, as we know, social media is used by individuals and groups to look for and get whatever they want. It is not that social media itself imposes anything on its users, whether they are young or old. So by allowing children to use it with parental guidance and observation nothing is going to go wrong. In fact, if adults find their emotional needs met through social media, children, too, can get that done. Also it is not that social media offers a platform for drug pushers, pedophiles and sexual predators alone. It is also used by the spiritually inclined to sell their religious ideas and propagate their faiths.
Uruguay's voters choose their next president in a close runoff with low stakes but much suspense MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) — Uruguayans on Sunday voted in the second round of the country's presidential election , with the conservative governing party and a left-leaning coalition locked in a close runoff following level-headed campaigns widely see Nayara Batschke, The Associated Press Nov 24, 2024 3:50 PM Share by Email Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Print Share via Text Message Claudia Noble stands outside the Broad Front's (Frente Amplio) election night headquarters after polls closed for the presidential run-off election in Montevideo, Uruguay, Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko) MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) — Uruguayans on Sunday voted in the second round of the country's presidential election , with the conservative governing party and a left-leaning coalition locked in a close runoff following level-headed campaigns widely seen as emblematic of the country's strong democracy. As polls closed Sunday evening, turnout stood at 89.4% — around the same as during the first round last month in which the two moderate coalitions both failed to win an outright majority. Voting in Uruguay is compulsory. Depending on how tight the vote turns out to be, electoral officials may not call the race for days — as happened in the contentious 2019 runoff that brought center-right President Luis Lacalle Pou to office and ended 15 years of rule by Uruguay’s left-leaning Broad Front by a razor-thin margin. Álvaro Delgado, the incumbent party’s candidate who won nearly 27% in the first round of voting on Oct. 27, has campaigned under the slogan “re-elect a good government." Other conservative parties that make up the government coalition — in particular, the Colorado Party that came in third place last month — notched 20% of the vote collectively, enough to give Delgado an edge over his challenger. Yamandú Orsi from the Broad Front, who took 44% of the vote in the general election, is promising to forge a “new left” in Uruguay that draws on the memory of stability and economic growth under his Broad Front coalition, which presided over pioneering social reforms that won widespread international acclaim from 2005-2020, including the legalization of abortion, same-sex marriage and sale of marijuana . With inflation easing and the economy expected to expand by some 3.2% this year, according to the International Monetary Fund, surveys show that Uruguayans remain largely satisfied with the administration of Lacalle Pou, who constitutionally cannot run for a second consecutive term. But persistent complaints about sluggish growth, stagnant wages and an upsurge in violent crime could just as easily add the small South American nation to a long list of places this year where frustrated voters have punished incumbents in elections around the world. With most polls showing a virtual tie between Delgado and Orsi, analysts say the vote may hinge on a small group of undecided voters — roughly 10% of registered voters in the nation of 3.4 million people. “Neither candidate convinced me and I feel that there are many in my same situation,” said Vanesa Gelezoglo, 31, in the capital, Montevideo, adding she would make up her mind at “the last minute.” Analysts say the candidates’ lackluster campaigns and broad consensus on key issues have generated extraordinary indecision and apathy in an election dominated by discussions about social spending and concerns over income inequality but largely free of the anti-establishment rage that has vaulted populist outsiders to power in neighboring Argentina and the United States. “The question of whether Frente Amplio (the Broad Front) raises taxes is not an existential question, unlike what we saw in the U.S. with Trump and Kamala framing each other as threats to democracy," said Nicolás Saldías, a Latin America and Caribbean senior analyst for the London-based Economist Intelligence Unit. “That doesn't exist in Uruguay.” Both candidates are also appealing to voter angst over the current government's struggle to stem the rise in violent crime that has shaken a nation long regarded as one of the region’s safest, with Delgado promising tough-on-crime policies and Orsi advocating a more community-oriented approach. Delgado, 55, a rural veterinarian with a long career in the National Party, served most recently as Secretary of the Presidency for Lacalle Pou and promises to pursue his predecessor’s pro-business policies. He would continue pushing for a trade deal with China that has raised hackles in Mercosur, an alliance of South American countries promoting regional commerce. "We have to give the government coalition a chance to consolidate its proposals,” said Ramiro Pérez, a street vendor voting for Delgado on Sunday. Orsi, 57, a former history teacher and two-time mayor from a working-class background, is widely seen as the political heir to former President José “Pepe” Mujica , an ex-Marxist guerilla who became a global icon for helping transform Uruguay into one of the region's most socially liberal and environmentally sustainable nations. “He's my candidate, not only for my sake but also for my children's,” Yeny Varone, a nurse at a polling station, said of Orsi. “In the future they'll have better working conditions, health and salaries.” Mujica, now 89 and recovering from esophageal cancer , turned up at his local polling station before balloting even began, praising Orsi's humility and Uruguay’s famous stability. “This is no small feat,” he said of Uruguay's “citizenry that respects formal institutions.” Orsi planned no dramatic changes, and, despite his call for a revitalized left-wing, his platform continues the Broad Front's traditional mix of market-friendly policies and welfare programs. He proposes tax incentives to lure investment and social security reforms that would lower the retirement age but fall short of a radical overhaul sought by Uruguay's unions. The contentious plebiscite on whether to boost pension payouts failed to pass in October, with Uruguayans rejecting generous pensions in favor of fiscal constraint. Both candidates pledged full cooperation with each other if elected. “I want (Orsi) to know that my idea is to form a government of national unity,” Delgado told reporters after casting his vote in the capital's upscale Pocitos neighborhood. He said that if he won, he and Orsi would chat on Monday over some yerba mate, the traditional herbal drink beloved by Uruguayans. Orsi described Sunday's democratic exercise as “an incredible experience" as he voted in Canelones, the sprawling town of beaches and cattle ranches just north of Montevideo where he served as mayor for a decade. “The essence of politics is agreements,” he said. “You never end up completely satisfied.” ___ Associated Press writer Isabel DeBre in Villa Tunari, Bolivia, contributed to this report. Nayara Batschke, The Associated Press See a typo/mistake? Have a story/tip? This has been shared 0 times 0 Shares Share by Email Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Print Share via Text Message More World News Jannik Sinner leads Italy past the Netherlands for its second consecutive Davis Cup title Nov 24, 2024 10:40 AM Poland's conservative opposition party taps historian as candidate for 2025 presidential run Nov 24, 2024 7:42 AM Israel says rabbi who went missing in the UAE was killed Nov 24, 2024 12:06 AM Featured Flyer
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