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Gallery: Suzuka 30th Anniversary Legends Parade

November 18, 2019 | News | No Comments

It’s always an entertaining and jaw-dropping experience to watch classic F1 cars in action, regardless of the time and place.

But the legends parade that commemorated this weekend Suzuka’s 30th anniversary as a Grand Prix venue was a pure delight to watch and especially to listen to for F1’s impassioned Japanese fans.

Among the runners were Mika Hakkinen, Felipe Massa, Kazuki Nakajima, Aguri Suzuki, Saroru Nakajim and a few others, showcasing a colorful selection of cars from the 80s and 90s.

For those doing the driving as for those watching, it was a fantastic experience complete with ear-piercing sounds and gripping sights!

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Nico Hulkenberg expects new team mate Daniel Ricciardo to provide Renault with some valuable technical knowledge collected from his previous team, Red Bull Racing.

Formula 1’s regulations are upgraded for this year with a series of aerodynamic changes, but Hulkenberg still believes the Aussie’s insight could give Renault a technical boost.

“As drivers we’re not engineers and certainly not aerodynamicists,” the Hulk told Auto Motor und Sport.

“He cannot tell us how to make the bargeboard, but he could help us by explaining what Red Bull did with various systems or on setting up the car.

“He will certainly have some information from Red Bull for us, that will be interesting for sure,” said the German who thinks Ricciardo’s arrival at Renault will bring “a breath of fresh air” to a team that is pushing to close the gap to Mercedes, Ferrari and Red Bull.

    Verstappen: ‘Ricciardo will miss what he had at Red Bull’

The 2019 aero tweaks, destined to improve overtaking, will include a simpler, larger front wing, simplified front brake ducts with no winglets and a wider, deeper rear wing.

The jury is still out however on whether the changes will allow a mid-field team such as Renault to edge significantly closer to F1’s trio of front-runners.

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“With the new front wings no one knows exactly where to go,” Hulkenberg said.

“But it’s not a full reboot, more of a soft reset. As a factory team, it must be our claim to be much closer to the front.

“In the last races we were missing between one and two seconds to the top teams, and we need to at least try to get rid of half of that.”

But Hulkenberg also insists that Renault, which is still building up its base, will require time to bridge the gap with its rivals up ahead.

“It also took time for Ferrari and Red Bull to catch Mercedes. We need that same time,” he added.

“Today nobody gets into Formula 1 and blows the others away. Everything has just become too complex for that. The first thing is finding the right people. It all takes time.”

Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

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Flowers from Guantanamo

November 18, 2019 | News | No Comments

Here in Kabul, young friends with the Afghan Peace Volunteers look forward  to learning more about “The Tea Project” in late December, when Aaron Hughes arrives, an artist, a U.S. military veteran, and a core member of Iraq Veterans Against War. He’ll carry with him 20 plaster replicas of a standard-issue, factory-made Styrofoam cup. They’re part of a set numbering 779 replica cups, each cup dedicated to prisoners detained in Guantanamo. In the entire collection, 220 of the cups bear names of Afghan citizens imprisoned in Guantanamo.

In Guantanamo, with each evening meal, Guantanamo prisoners are served tea in styrofoam cups. Many prisoners etch floral designs into their cups, which become a nightly artistic outlet for men with few other freedoms allowed them. Aaron had heard a former Guantanamo guard describe how deeply he grew to deeply love the cups that had become works of art.  

The cups would then be collected, each night, and turned over to military intelligence which most likely just dumped them. Aaron’s cups are more durable. A Guantanamo prisoner’s name is written on the base of every cup, and each carries a unique design. Following the practice of the prisoners, Aaron focused on etching floral patterns into the cups he created, displaying flowers that are native to each prisoner’s homeland. 220 of the cups he has sculpted bear the names of prisoners from Afghanistan.

Life stories represented by each cup are reaching a wide variety of individuals and groups during Aaron’s travels on behalf of the project. He invites people to sit with him, sip tea from the cups, and talk about their stories related to war, destruction, peace, love, creativity …the conversations range freely, but the cups bring a certain focus, remembering the prisoners in Guantanamo.

I wish that Aaron could somehow sit across from Tariq Ba Odah and serve him tea. Now 36 years old, Tariq Ba Odah, a Yemeni citizen, arrived in Guantanamo in 2002, when he was only 23. Detained without charge in Guantanamo since 2002, Tariq has maintained a hunger strike since 2007. He now weighs 74 pounds. His lawyers say that he visibly suffers from severe effects of malnutrition and is at serious risk of permanent physical and neurological impairment and death. Tariq Ba Odah endures horrible force feeding rather than cooperate with the system that has separated him and the other prisoners from loved ones, subjecting them to torture and dehumanizing conditions.  

Witness Against Torture activists from the U.S. focused on Tariq Ba Odah’s life in Guantanamo when they set up their encampment, in late November, 2015, in Cuba, outside the U.S. naval base. Like Aaron, they feel great empathy for the people imprisoned in Guantanamo, along with responsibility to keep educating U.S. people about the plight of 107 prisoners still held there. The delegation demanded that the prison close. They reject a new plan being developed by the Obama administration which would move the Guantanamo prisoners to prisons in the U.S., some still to be held indefinitely without charge or trial.

“Simply moving Guantanamo is no solution,” says Helen Schietinger of Washington, D.C. “That would mean holding on to the barbaric practice of indefinite detention. Besides, the entire domestic system of “correctional’ institutions is a travesty, poisoned by racism. We need to overhaul the U.S. justice system, not add Guantanamo to it.”

Enmanuel Candelario, an artist from New York, spoke bluntly about the base itself, calling it “an unwelcome symbol of U.S. power, which houses a torture chamber.”

We can’t directly nourish Tariq Ba Odah or bring him the consolation and affection for which he must also be starving. But together we can invite people to slow down and think about their actual circumstances and relationships with supposed enemies. We can help dismantle the terrible Islamophobia and fear that keeps many people in the U.S. imprisoned in the reckless grip of war makers.

When Aaron arrives in the Afghan Peace Volunteer community, he will sit with the young volunteers as well as the child laborers who are part of the Borderfree Street Kids School. He’ll also connect with local artists. While here, he hopes to serve tea and converse with people in a variety of places.

The conversations will very likely stir up questions about the 220 Afghans who were imprisoned in Guantanamo, as well as Afghans detained in the ‘Afghan Guantanamo’, Bagram Prison. I asked friends in our community here what kinds of questions they hope might be raised. Here are two responses: “Prisoners of the U.S. military – are they people who can create and enjoy art?” “Do they love?”

Kathy Kelly ([email protected]) co-coordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence.

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A cancer patient was arrested in Atlanta, Georgia on Wednesday after allegedly “disrupting” the negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) in a protest aimed at maintaining access to affordable cancer medicines in the dozen countries, including the U.S. and Canada, that would be impacted by the colossal trade deal.

Video footage showed Zahara Heckscher—who was wearing a t-shirt that read “I Have Cancer. I Can’t Wait Years” and holding a hospital drip pole that read “TPP: Don’t Cut My IV”—being handcuffed and led away by police after she refused to leave an area within the Westin Hotel where trade ministers were holding the high-level and secretive talks.

Heckscher is part of a group of cancer patients and survivors who, alongside other healthcare advocates, have demanded the secret text of the TPP be released so they can verify that a final agreement would not include a “death sentence clause”—a proposal submitted by the U.S. delegation and included in earlier drafts that would see de facto monopolies on biological medicines extended for up to 8 years.

As she attempted to read a statement to gathered press in the hotel lobby, Heckscher refused to stop talking or leave the area:

According to Public Citizen, the Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group that has raised rounded objections to the TPP and similar deal, Heckscher has been treated by biologicals including trastuzumab (Hercepin) and pertuzumab (Perjeta). She is currently undergoing chemotherapy as part of a clinical trial, the group explained, and continues on denosumab (Xgeva) treatment as well. 

“[This rule] represents the worst of secretive trade deals – a rule that has nothing to do with trade, but will lead to preventable suffering. You can put a suit and tie on this, but it still stinks.” —Peter Maybarduk, Public Citizen

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Speaking on her own behalf, Heckscher explained the protest by saying, “For thousands of women to die unnecessary of breast cancer because of the TPP is a horrible, cruel, premeditated, and avoidable catastrophe. The provisions being decided by TPP ministers today could allow drug monopolies on biologics for 8 years.  Some of these medicines cost up to tens of thousands, even hundreds of thousands of dollars a year.”    

She continued, “When you have breast cancer today, you can’t wait 8 years or 7 years or 6 years for a treatment to become available or affordable. When you have cancer, even a one-year delay in affordable medicine can be a death sentence. That is why we call this proposed provision of the TPP a ‘death sentence clause.’ If it passes, thousands of women like me will die waiting.”

As the talks in Atlanta continue, Public Citizen warns that the issue of pharmaceutical monopolies and biologics has been largely absent from the public debate over the TPP, but should serve as a serious warning for the corporate-fueled agenda being pushed by U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman and his negotiating team. According to the group:

The USTR has long pushed for increased marketing exclusivity periods for biologics – medical products derived from living organisms, including many new and forthcoming cancer treatments. Exclusivity means product monopolies, with no competition from generics or biosimilars; medicine prices in the tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars per person; and the rationing of treatment access. Marketing exclusivity is separate from and independent of patent protection, though the protections may overlap. The USTR has supported an eight-year minimum monopoly period, while a majority bloc of negotiating countries will not consider more than five years’ exclusivity.

“This is a cynical rebranding of a failed negotiating position,” said Peter Maybarduk, director of Public Citizen’s Global Access to Medicines program. “It represents the worst of secretive trade deals – a rule that has nothing to do with trade, but will lead to preventable suffering. You can put a suit and tie on this, but it still stinks. Non-U.S. TPP negotiators and trade ministers should continue standing strong against this USTR demand, because, despite the spin, five plus three still equals eight.”

Human tragedy unfolded during the annual Muslim hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia on Thursday as more than 700 people were crushed to death, and hundreds more injured, as a stampede took hold during a procession in Mina, outside the holy city of Mecca.

Early estimates and official statements about the number of people killed or harmed have continued to rise amid a chaotic scene. According to CNN:

The stampede occurred Thursday morning during the ritual known as “stoning the devil” in the tent city of Mina, about 2 miles from Mecca, Islam’s holiest city.

Hundreds have been killed in past years during the same ceremony, and it comes only 13 days after a crane collapse killed more than 100 people at another major Islamic holy site, the Grand Mosque in Mecca.

“We have a stampede accident in Mina, and civil defense is dealing with it,” said Brig. Gen. Mansour al-Turki, an Interior Ministry spokesman.

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Civil defense authorities said the latest death toll is 453, but the numbers have been climbing steadily. Officials deployed 4,000 workers and 220 ambulances and other vehicles to Mina to help with the disaster.

Though such incidents have occurred in the past during the annual religious pilgrimage, the very large number of casualties on Thursday makes it possibly the worst in the modern history of the hajj. As the New York Times reports:

In 2006, a stampede there claimed more than 360 lives on the eve of the hajj, and a day earlier an eight-story building near the Grand Mosque collapsed, killing at least 73 people.

In 2001, a stampede in Mina killed around 35 people; in 1998, about 180 pilgrims were trampled there after several of them fell off an overpass during the stoning ritual; in 1997, at least 340 pilgrims were killed in a fire in Mina set off by high winds; and in 1994, about 270 were killed in a stampede there.

“There is no accountability,” Madawi al-Rasheed, an anthropologist and visiting professor at the London School of Economics who is the author of several books on Saudi Arabia, said in a phone interview. “It’s shocking that almost every year there is some kind of death toll.”

In addition to rolling coverage at the Guardian, Twitter is also hosting updates and perspectives on Thursday’s deadly incident:

Tweets about Mecca stampede

Robert Downey Jr. welcomed his on-screen nemesis and real-life friend Tom Hiddleston to Instagram in a way that only he could. Despite being a little late to join, Hiddleston was greeted by friends and fans with open arms on Tuesday—most notably (and sarcastically) by his Marvel co-star.

Downey Jr., who plays Tony Stark (aka Iron Man) alongside Hiddleston’s Loki in the Marvel Avengers franchise, poked a bit of good-natured fun at Hiddleston’s high-profile romance with pop princess Taylor Swift.

“Join me in welcoming the biggest T. Stark fan of them all to Instagram! @twhiddleston” Downey Jr. captioned a photo of Hiddleston wearing an “I [heart emoticon] T.S.” tank top at the beach during Hiddleswift’s epic Fourth of July weekend in Rhode Island. The shirt is, of course, a shoutout to his lady love, but Downey Jr. understandably couldn’t resist teasing his friend.

As for Hiddleston’s first post on the popular photo sharing app? The handsome Brit teased the return of his character Loki, whom he will play once again in the upcoming movie Thor: Ragnarok. “He’s back!” the actor wrote along with a selfie of himself in costume.

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We’re looking forward to plenty more selfies and maybe some retaliation from Hiddleston in the future.

(TULSA, Okla.) — Federal prosecutors say a Chinese national employed by a U.S. petroleum company has pleaded guilty in federal court to stealing trade secrets from his employer.

Authorities say 35-year-old Hongjin Tan pleaded guilty on Tuesday in federal court in Tulsa to theft of a trade secret, unauthorized transmission of a trade secret and unauthorized possession of a trade secret.

A plea agreement calls for Tan to serve up to two years in prison and pay restitution of $150,000.

Tan’s attorney, Ryan Ray, hasn’t returned a telephone message seeking comment.

Court documents indicate Tan worked for Phillips 66 when he stole secrets related to the development of “next generation battery technologies” worth more than $1 billion.

Sentencing is set for February 2020.

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Hulu is again raising prices for its online TV bundle, as other streaming-TV providers do the same.

Hulu’s service, like AT&T TV Now, Dish’s Sling and YouTube TV, are a replica of traditional TV but on the internet. They were once vaunted as a successor to traditional cable. But the market has lost steam as prices rise. One early entrant, Sony’s PlayStation Vue, is shutting down, and analysts expect others to follow.

The entertainment industry’s attention has shifted to new and upcoming streaming services like Apple TV Plus, Disney Plus, AT&T’s HBO Max and Comcast’s Peacock.

Hulu with Live TV’s price will rise $10, to $55 a month, in December. Prices had risen $5 in February.

The Disney-owned streaming provider’s traditional video-on-demand service will remain at $6 a month.

Sebastian Vettel topped the timesheet on the final day of pre-season Formula 1 testing at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. The Ferrari driver ended the day just 0.003s ahead of 2018 F1 champion Lewis Hamilton, as Mercedes at last showed some true pace. 

Vettel’s final day benchmark arrived in the morning session. The German bolted on a set of C5 compound Pirelli tyres shortly before the lunch break and posted a time of 1:16.221. 

Vettel’s day ended early, however. The German added 42 laps to his morning total of 68 but then stopped on track on the exit of Turn 2 bringing out the red flags. 

Ferrari later reported that an “electrical issue” had caused the stoppage and that due to the nature of the problem Vettel would not return to the action. 

His morning time continued to serve as the benchmark during the afternoon, but only just. After days spent on long stints run on tyres from the harder end of Pirelli’s compound spectrum Mercedes finally put in performance runs on the final day and Hamilton made them count. 

Bottas had run for the world champion team in the morning and the Finn ended his pre-season work three tenths of a second off Vettel’s best time of testing. 

In the afternoon Hamilton chipped away at his lap time and when he switched to the C4 tyres he jumped to third with a 1:16.628s effort. With a little over an hour left on the clock he took on the softest tyres in the range and pushed past Bottas’ time to set a lap of 1:16.224s, just three thousandths of a second behind Vettel. 

Those looking to see whether Honda-powered Red Bull Racing could join the battle at the top of the order were left disappointed, however. The team did manage to get the RB15 damaged in Pierre Gasly heavy day three crash on track in the morning, but Max Verstappen was only able to complete 29 laps before a gearbox problem halted his running. Red Bull attempted to resolve the issue but in the mid-afternoon called a halt to testing. Verstappen ended the day in P11.

With Bottas third, fourth place on the final day went to Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg who set a C5 time of 1:16.843s late in the session. Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat took fifth place for Toro Rosso ahead of McLaren’s Carlos Sainz.

Hulkenberg was separated from eighth-placed team-mate Daniel Ricciardo Haas’ Romain Grosjean Haas who set a best time of 1:17.076 on the C5 tyres. The lap put him 0.038s ahead of Ricciardo. 

Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Raikkonen finished ninth ahead of the second Haas of Kevin Magnussen and Verstappen. The order was completed by Racing Point’s Sergio Perez and Williams’ Robert Kubica.

2019 Formula 1 Pre-Season Test 2, Day 4
1 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:16.221s 110
2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:16.224s +0.003 61
3 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:16.561s +0.340 71
4 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 1:16.843s +0.622 51
5 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 1:16.898s +0.677 131
6 Carlos Sainz McLaren 1:16.913s +0.692 134
7 Romain Grosjean Haas 1:17.076s +0.855 73
8 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:17.114s +0.893 52
9 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 1:17.239s +1.018 132
10 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:17.565s +1.344 94
11 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:17.709s +1.488 29
12 Sergio Perez Racing Point 1:17.791s +1.570 104
13 Robert Kubica Williams 1:18.993s +2.772 90

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Ferrari completed a clean sweep of practice session one-twos at the Sakhir Circuit, with Charles Leclerc running quickest in the final hour of practice for the Bahrain Grand Prix. 

The Monegasque driver set a best time of 1:29.569 on the soft compound Pirelli tyres with a little under 20 minutes left in the session. He was immediately followed on track by team-mate Sebastian Vettel who slotted into P2 0.169s behind.

The pace left all of their rivals in the shade, with Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton eventually becoming the Scuderia’s closest rival with a late qualifying sim that boosted him above team-mate Valtteri Bottas. The defending champion’s time of 1:30.334 still left him 0.765s adrift of Leclerc. 

Australian Grand Prix winner Bottas was left with fourth place and his best lap of 1:30.389 left as the last man to get within a second of the Ferraris. 

Haas’ Romain Grosjean took fifth place in the session, 1.249s behind Leclerc with Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg sixth thanks to a lap of 1:30.910.

McLaren rookie Lando Norris continued to impress setting a lap of 1:30.955 to claim seventh plac ahead of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen.

Red Bull have looked decidedly out of sorts at the Bahrain circuit, with both Verstappen and team-mate Pierre Gasly complaining of poor grip on the C3 soft compound Pirelli  on offer this weekend. 

Verstappen ended the final practice session 1.390s off Leclerc but it was an even more disappointing session for Gasly who finished in P12 almost half a second behind his team-mate. 

Norris McLaren team-mate Carlos Sainz took ninth place in the session ahead of Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat. 
2019 FIA Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix – Free Practice 3
1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 15 1:29.569 
2 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 16 1:29.738 0.169
3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 10 1:30.334 0.765
4 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 12 1:30.389 0.820
5 Romain Grosjean Haas 14 1:30.818 1.249
6 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 12 1:30.910 1.341
7 Lando Norris McLaren 15 1:30.955 1.386
8 Max Verstappen Red Bull 10 1:30.959 1.390
9 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren 14 1:30.965 1.396
10 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 17 1:31.173 1.604
11 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 21 1:31.333 1.764
12 Pierre Gasly Red Bull 13 1:31.392 1.823
13 Kevin Magnussen Haas 13 1:31.540 1.971
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15 Sergio Perez Racing Point 9 1:31.638 2.069
16 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 11 1:31.643 2.074
17 Alex Albon Toro Rosso 17 1:31.679 2.110
18 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 21 1:32.132 2.563
19 George Russell Williams 14 1:33.387 3.818
20 Robert Kubica Williams 13 1:33.525 3.956