Saturday 12 February 2022

Something seriously doesn’t add up in Kamila Valieva’s doping case

 

Something seriously doesn’t add up in Kamila Valieva’s doping case

The news that Kamila Valieva has tested positive for a banned substance raises more questions than answers
Something seriously doesn’t add up in Kamila Valieva’s doping case

Heading into the Winter Olympics, Kamila Valieva would have been forgiven for thinking that the main opposition she faced in Beijing would be from her rivals on the ice.

Utterly dominant all season, Valieva looked liked a shoo-in for the ladies’ singles title in Beijing, having wrapped up the European and Russian crowns in recent months, and after already collecting one gold medal for the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) with a dazzling display in the team event in the Chinese capital. 

But as we now know, the 15-year-old is confronted with far bigger opposition to her further success in Beijing than just her figure skating competitors. 

Suffocating speculation 

That was something confirmed by Friday’s announcement by the International Testing Agency (ITA) that Valieva returned a positive doping test from a sample at the Russian nationals back in December.

The news has, at least, ended some of the stifling speculation that had surrounded Valieva. 

Ever since Tuesday’s announcement that the medal ceremony for the figure skating team event was postponed, murmurs had turned into an incessant drone, drowning out almost everything else going on with the ROC team in Beijing.    

In some ways, it is a small mercy that we now know some of the facts.

The ITA – apparently reluctantly – named Valieva as the athlete in question in their announcement after reports in the Russian media and elsewhere that she was at the center of a “legal issue” the International Olympic Committee (IOC) was dealing with.

The ITA suggested naming Valieva outright had been forced upon them by circumstance, “seeing that some in the media did not grant her the same protection and have reported widely on the basis of unofficial information.”

It’s true: much of the media response to Valieva’s plight – and seemingly scant regard for her status as a minor – is one particularly unsavory aspect to this saga.

One could argue that at least now we have an official version of events, neatly tied up in a timeline from the ITA.

Valieva’s positive sample is from December 25, when she was tested by RUSADA on her way to winning the Russian title in St. Petersburg.

The sample was sent to a WADA-accredited in laboratory in Stockholm, Sweden, for analysis. (Russia currently does not have WADA approval for its own lab in Moscow.) There, the probe revealed traces of the prohibited substance trimetazidine – a drug used to treat angina and chest pain.

Then – and we’ll come back to this point later – the result was reported to officials in Beijing on February 8 (although Russian officials later said February 7).

The Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) was informed, and provisionally suspended Valieva with immediate effect.

However, Valieva successfully appealed that decision with RUSADA’s independent Disciplinary Anti-Doping Committee on February 9 – freeing her to train in Beijing ahead of her planned appearance in the ladies’ figure skating singles event, starting on Tuesday.

The problem is that for Valieva to line up on the ice that day, she’ll have to navigate a whole host of legal obstacles before she can even think about landing one of her trademark quads.

The big guns of the IOC, WADA and the International Skating Union (ISU) have all aligned in their intention to appeal the decision to lift Valieva’s provisional suspension; if they get their way with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), we likely won’t be seeing Valieva again in Beijing.

Doping test delays 

The legal battle lines are clearly drawn, and Valieva will be given support from the ROC, the Russian Sports Ministry, and the Russian figure skating federation – as well as from millions more in her homeland.

But while it will be left to the lawyers, on closer inspection some things already don’t seem to hold up under scrutiny.

Chief among them is the amount of time it took for the WADA lab in Sweden to report the positive test.

Why, if the sample was taken on December 25, did we only learn about Valieva’s positive result more than six weeks later – and after Valieva had already starred in the ROC team’s gold medal win?

That is one glaring discrepancy not lost on ROC chief Stanislav Pozdnyakov.

“In accordance with international standards for laboratories of the World Anti-Doping Agency, the deadline for an A Sample is 20 days from the moment the sample was received in the laboratory,” he told reporters in Beijing.  

“It looks very strange that it took almost a month for the sample to get from St. Petersburg to Stockholm. This raises very serious questions for me. It seems like someone held this probe until the end of the team skaters’ competition.”

On the face of it, it’s a legitimate question which is screaming out for an answer – and one which a RUSADA statement on Friday offered only some insight to. 

According to Russian anti-doping officials, their counterparts at the Swedish lab which handled Valieva's sample were delayed due to Covid-related issues and restrictions. 

OK, fair enough, but will we get confirmation that other results were delayed, or was it just Valieva's? 

Next, questions on the positive test itself.

How did trimetazidine get into Valieva’s system? Can her coaches and doctors offer insight, and are they in some way accountable, even if wholly unintentionally? (On this latter point, we should note that RUSADA is investigating this.)

Is there an alternative explanation, potentially linked to the WADA advisory note issued in 2018 that states that trimetazidine could crop up in urine samples as a false positive for lomerizine, a migraine medication which is permitted?

What about a B-Sample? How can you account for the ROC’s assertion that Valieva repeatedly passed doping tests both before and after the positive sample from December 25 – including at the Beijing Games?

From the side of CAS, they will have to judge on the reasoning for the decision by the disciplinary committee to lift Valieva’s provisional suspension and free her up to train and compete in Beijing while the row rumbles on. There must have been some reasoning behind that, which is surely of not insignificant importance?  

Looking at the bigger picture, would anyone in Russia really intentionally dope one of their best Beijing gold-medal prospects – and most high-profile athletes – knowing that the eyes of the drug-testing world are upon them?

ROC athletes are among the most tested athletes at these Games, just as they were in Tokyo. Valieva is already head and shoulders above the competition, so why would she need to take something which some have quibbled shouldn't even be on the WADA list, given any questionable benefits (not least in a sport like figure skating)? 

Jumping to conclusions 

Nonetheless, the firm assertion from some in the West seems to be that this was a deliberate plot by Russian doping masterminds.

The fact that American anti-doping officials at USADA have pounced so effortlessly on the situation is predictable and yet disconcerting.

There seems to be a desperate desire among them to prosecute Russians through some poetic justice under the law concocted in the name of Grigory Rodchenkov – the dodgy doctor who blew the whistle on allegations of Russian state-sponsored doping, only to flee the country. (Rodchenkov, let’s remember, remains in hiding and has been charged in absentia in his homeland for abuse of office.)

The row will be seized upon to wrap up a whole bundle of accusations against Russia: Look at the way young athletes are treated! Look at how the system chews them up and wantonly spits them out with scant regard for the consequences! Look at what years of supposed systematic cheating has created!

All in all, the scandal surrounding Valieva offers a ripe opportunity to try and squash Russia yet again, just as the nation was edging its way towards the completion of its WADA ban in December, when the Russian flag and anthem would finally return to accompany Russian athletes at major international sporting events.

The real problem, though, is that a narrative is quickly forming before we have the answers to some very big questions – not least from the people who are seeking to force Valieva out of the competition in Beijing.  

In many ways, Friday’s announcement has raised many, many more questions than it has answered – and not necessarily for people in Russia.

https://www.rt.com/uk/549066-kamila-valieva-unanswered-questions/

Astronomy and Mythology in Native American Culture

 

Astronomy and Mythology in Native American Culture

By Grady Winston

Before the age of global positioning systems or compasses, people looked to the stars to find their way. And before civilizations knew what stars were, people formed their own beliefs about their significance. In North America, indigenous tribes had differing ideas about what the stars meant, some believing that the night sky had spiritual meaning, and some attributing human-like qualities to the twinkling objects.

Archaeoastronomy is the study of how people of the past understood the stars and the sky, however this broadly applies to all ancient cultures. The Mayans, Celts, and Egyptians alike all had their own methods for tracking the movement of the stars and heavenly bodies, but all of these cultures have the common belief that the phenomenon above their heads was somehow larger and greater than they were. As such, the vast majority of ancient cultures associated the origins of everything, including the sky, moon, sun and earth with some form of mythology related to the stars. Astronomy played in an important role in early Native American cultures, serving as the basis for governance, agricultural practices and more. And studying the stars also caused tribes to theorize about the beginning of life in the universe.

The Pawnee’s Guiding Principles

Polaris

The Skidi band of the Pawnee Indians referred to a ring of stars in the sky as “The Council of Chiefs.” The Pawnee believed the circle represented their governance style of elders holding council to resolve important matters. This constellation was paramount to the way the Pawnee interacted daily as well as their religious beliefs. They used the stars to set agricultural patterns and embody their own societal values. The Council of Chiefs was connected to their “Chief Star,” what is now referred to as Polaris, which represented their primary god Tirawahat. They built their lodges with openings at the top – not only to allow smoke to escape from warming fires inside, but to allow a clear view of the “Council” stars. Today, those stars are known as the Corona Borealis.

The Anasazi

The Crab Nebula

In New Mexico, researchers found a cave painting that appears to depict a supernova explosion; the orientation of a crescent moon and stars indicate that the art may represent the Crab Nebula, formed in 1054 A.D. by supernova. The Anasazi way of life remains somewhat of a mystery, but researchers found that the tribe built a solar observatory, suggesting that the sky was extremely important to the Anasazi way of life.

Navajo Creation of the Sky

A Navajo legend describes the Four Worlds that had no sun and the Fifth World, which represents Earth. According to the legend, the first people of the Fifth World were given four lights but were dissatisfied with the amount of light they had on Earth. After many attempts to satisfy the people, the First Woman created the sun to bring warmth and light to the land, and the moon to provide coolness and moisture. These were crafted from quartz, and, when there were bits of quartz that were left behind by the carving, they were tossed into the sky to make stars.

Hopi Blue Star

Like the Navajo, the Hopi believe there were worlds before this one. The modern era is believed to be the Fourth World, and each world that came before this one ended with the appearance of “the blue star.” In carvings created by the Hopi in the American Southwest, it seems what they saw may have led them to a belief in aliens, a belief that certainly retains a place in the culture of the U.S. to this day.

The divisions between Native American cultures were not unlike the divisions between the societies of today, so few myths extend beyond a single tribe. With the same sky overhead, ancient myths from around the world do share much in common. The History & Culture channel of the Chickasaw TV website features the tribe’s myths about Creation and the Great Flood, two stories repeated again and again throughout most cultures of the world, proving that, even when the world seemed impossibly large, many people were not far from each other, in terms of what they believed under the night sky.

https://nativeamericatoday.com/addressing-health-disparities-q-a-with-dr-don-warne/

The Pandemic of Gov’t Failure

 

The Pandemic of Gov’t Failure

Medical professionals, politicians, and the media all failed to play it straight about COVID.

Anyone watching the news in recent days can’t help but notice a dramatic shift in the tone and messaging about COVID. Mark Alexander predicted this pivot last month.

The same journalists, political analysts, and evening news anchors who’ve been telling us for two years that mask and vaccine dictates are good for us are changing their tune. And the same politicians who’ve shut down our schools, churches, and businesses are announcing that it’s time to end the mandates.

How convenient.

With the midterm elections just nine months away, and polling showing a conservative and independent backlash against the totalitarian Left, suddenly masks and booster shots are yesterday’s news.

Political analyst Stephen Kruiser quips, “The Democrats have been pivoting so forcefully on various COVID-related things this past week that I’m surprised they aren’t all dizzy and nauseated.”

“They’ve been trying to erase the memory of their previous, horribly wrong policies,” he adds. “Of course, their dutiful flying monkeys in the mainstream media have been working overtime to help.”

For more than two years we’ve seen government mandates that shuttered family businesses, told people of faith it was against the law to sing together in church, took children out of schools and put them on Zoom for six hours a day, and even banned people from having cookouts or walking on the beach.

They told us to shut up and trust the science. Sorry, Science™.

But at least one recent study reveals the lockdowns “contributed to reducing economic activity, raising unemployment, reducing schooling, causing political unrest, contributing to domestic violence, and undermining liberal democracy.”

Americans get the politics of it, but it’s shameless for those who wield power to suddenly pretend what we’ve been put through over the past two years never happened. Then again, the overnight pivot of those in government, health, and media are proving an important point: The COVID response was a failure, and lies eventually crumble in the face of truth.

Even more appalling, the very people responsible for the failure are now claiming victory.

In a must-read column, economist Stephen Moore highlights a laundry list of blunders in the federal response to COVID. “The tally for how much the federal government spent to combat COVID-19 is now estimated to be $5 trillion,” he says. “It is more than the combined costs of World Wars I and II. The left is celebrating that politicians in Washington saved us. Really? From what exactly?”

One of those charlatans and opportunists who claimed to be saving us is Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s highest-paid bureaucrat and Donald Trump’s biggest blunder.

In the early weeks of the pandemic, Fauci said we didn’t need masks and we shouldn’t be worried about COVID any more than the seasonal flu. Indeed, most experts once agreed that masks do little good against viral spread.

Moreover, as political analyst Michael Brendan Dougherty writes: “Credible scientific evidence that outdoor transmission of the coronavirus was negligible was available late in the spring of 2020, even as newspapers were still shaming people about being on beaches and a solo paddleboarder was arrested in California. But CDC guidance on outdoor activities and outdoor mask-wearing didn’t change for a year.”

Dougherty adds, “Fauci has been the face of this shape-shifting consensus, even at its most ridiculous.”

But it’s hard to let go of power, and some on the Left are going to milk this for as long as they can get away with it.

People like Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Wolensky and White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki still insist on muzzling American school children.

In fact, Psaki is making it clear the Biden administration isn’t quite ready to pivot, but is holding on to the status quo, leaving the president to lead from behind.

Ultimately, Wolensky and Psaki will get the memo that’s been sent out to Democrats and their media minions to return to normal.

Even Fauci now recognizes that mandates are a thing of the past. According to The Hill, Fauci said this week that “he hopes all COVID-19 restrictions will be halted in the coming months as well, citing mandatory mask-wearing as one of the restrictions he expects to end … in 2022.”

You know the jig is up when the spin doctor says it’s time to end the mandates.

The lives of every American are worse today because of incompetent, power-hungry politicians, bureaucrats, and medical professionals who used a virus as an opportunity to tell the rest of us it was too dangerous to live in a free society.

We’ve learned a lot since 2020. Let’s hope the American people never allow their government to get away with something like this again.

https://patriotpost.us/articles/86178-the-pandemic-of-govt-failure-2022-02-11

Health & Wellness: Here’s why people are having bad sex

 

Here’s why people are having bad sex


This factor affects the quality of your sex life and it can be easily improved.


Sneaker Fetish: Creep Snatches Sneaker Off Woman's Foot in Brooklyn Subway

Subway creep snatched sneaker off 47-year-old woman's foot as she climbed the stairs at Brooklyn station at 11am

  • A woman in Brooklyn was left with only one shoe after a man ripped her sneaker off her foot as she walked out of a subway station on Wednesday 
  • The 47-year-old woman was walking up the stairs at the Grand Army Plaza station in Park Slope at around 11am
  • Suspect ripped the left sneaker from her foot as she headed out of the station
  •  Thief then ran into the station, jumping over the turnstile before getting on train
  •  Victim was not physically injured during the incident
  • Surveillance footage caught several clear images of the suspect NYPD would like to speak with 

The NYPD are on the hunt for a man who was caught on camera after he had ripped a woman's sneaker off her foot while exiting a subway station in Brooklyn.

The 47-year-old woman was heading up the stairs at Grand Army Plaza at about 11am on Wednesday when her shoe was snatched from her.

The suspect then jumped the turnstile while still carrying the purple sneaker, before getting onto a train. 

Clear surveillance video captured images of the man who did not appear to know what to do with himself after jumping onto the platform. 

Man who rips woman's sneaker off flees Brooklyn subway station
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A woman in Brooklyn was left with only one shoe after a man ripped her sneaker off her foot as she walked out of a subway station on Wednesday

A woman in Brooklyn was left with only one shoe after a man ripped her sneaker off her foot as she walked out of a subway station on Wednesday 

The thief then ran into the station, jumping over the turnstile before getting on train

The thief then ran into the station, jumping over the turnstile before getting on train

The 47-year-old woman was walking up the stairs at the Grand Army Plaza station in Park Slope at around 11am Suspect ripped the left sneaker from her foot as she headed out of the station

The 47-year-old woman was walking up the stairs at the Grand Army Plaza station in Park Slope at around 11am Suspect ripped the left sneaker from her foot as she headed out of the station

At one stage, he could be seen turning to walk back out through the exit gate but appeared to have trouble opening it. 

It gave cameras located inside the station plenty of time to get a good shot of him from various angles.  

The suspect was described as a male, black, 20 to 30 years old, 5'10" tall and about 220lbs. 

In photos he was seen wearing a gray knit cap, a gray vest, blue sweater, blue jeans and white sneakers. 

The man did not seem to know what to do with himself and attempted to open the emergency exit gate but it appeared stuck

The man did not seem to know what to do with himself and attempted to open the emergency exit gate but it appeared stuck

Victim was not physically injured during the incident but surveillance footage caught several clear images of the suspect the NYPD would like to speak with

Victim was not physically injured during the incident but surveillance footage caught several clear images of the suspect the NYPD would like to speak with

The brazen theft is the latest in a string of subway violence that led new Mayor Eric Adams to declare he doesn't feel 'safe' in the city's transit system. 

Crime in New York is up over 41 percent compared to last year, with transit incidents up 74 percent compared to this time in 2021.

There have been 227 transit crime incidents citywide since the beginning of the year, according to the latest figures from the New York Police Department.

That's up from 130 such incidents at this time last year.

Meanwhile, an NYPD union leader slammed Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg this week, claiming criminals throughout New York City have become 'emboldened' by a soft-on-crime memo he authored last month. 

Last week, Paul DiGiacomo, president of New York City's Detectives' Endowment Association, said Bragg's memo, which was sent to assistant prosecutors on January 3 shortly after he took office, has since led to a series of violent crimes and murders.

'I believe they feel 100 percent emboldened,' DiGiacomo told Fox News of criminals' response to Bragg's soft-on-crime policy.

Crimes within the city's subway and transit system have not been spared by the recent citywide spike in crime.

The most notable incident involved Michelle Alyssa Go, 40, a senior manager at consulting conglomerate Deloitte. 

She died on January 15 died after Simon Martial allegedly shoved her off the platform at West 42nd Street and Broadway at around 9:40 am.

When Martial, who has a lengthy criminal history, was asked by a reporter if he had been the one to push Go, he seemingly admitted to killing the subway rider and said: 'Yes, because I'm God. Yes, I did it. I'm God. I can do it.'

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg speaks during Thursday's event by New York University School of Law, in which he defended his office's policies

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg speaks during Thursday's event by New York University School of Law, in which he defended his office's policies

Speaking to the New York Post last month, Martial's older sister, Josette Simon, from Georgia, argued that her brother belonged in a mental health facility and should have been kept off the streets.

Last month, police released surveillance footage of a suspect accused of shoving a 62-year-old man onto the subway tracks on Sunday, January 23, just weeks after Go's death.

The New York Police Department’s Crime Stoppers unit released surveillance footage of a man in a black hoodie leaving a subway station shortly after the assault at the A/C platform at Fulton Street Station.

The unidentified man allegedly approached a 62-year-old man from behind on Sunday, January 23 and pushed him onto the tracks as a train was entering the station.

The victim luckily knew to hide in a space under the platform to avoid being hit, but wasn't quick enough and was slammed by part of the train.

He suffered a laceration and bruising to his left leg before he escaped the tracks and treated his wounds at New York Downtown Hospital. 

The assault came just weeks after Michelle Go (above) died on January 15 after she was shoved off the subway platform at West 42nd Street and Broadway
Simon Martial, 61, was arrested on a charge of second-degree murder for allegedly pushing Go

The assault came just weeks after Michelle Go (above) died on January 15 after she was shoved off the subway platform at West 42nd Street and Broadway

Meanwhile, the news of Wednesday morning's attempted rape came hours after another woman was robbed at knifepoint as she waited for the train at an Uptown Manhattan subway stop during rush hour on Thursday.

The woman, 43, was talking on the phone and waiting for the C train at the West 163rd Street station in Washington Heights at around 6:10 pm when a man approached her, according to the New York Police Department. 

The unidentified attacker flashed a knife and tried to grab her phone as they struggled. The woman kept her phone, but he made off with her purse. 

Surveillance video shows the woman chasing her assailant through a turnstile. She was uninjured and officers later found the purse emptied out. 

Police are searching for a man who allegedly brandished a knife and tried to pry a woman's phone out of her hands before making off with her purse on Thursday, February 3. Surveillance video shows the woman chasing her assailant through a turnstile

Police are searching for a man who allegedly brandished a knife and tried to pry a woman's phone out of her hands before making off with her purse on Thursday, February 3. Surveillance video shows the woman chasing her assailant through a turnstile

Woman is mugged at knifepoint at NYC subway station
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Man snatches sneaker off woman's foot as she's climbing the stairs Brooklyn subway station