Tag: General News

  • AMAC Gets Lion’s Share As FCTA Disburses N4bn To Six Area Councils, Others

    The Federal Capital Territory Administration has disbursed a total sum of N4,439,259,692.78bn as statutory allocation to the six area councils and various stakeholders for the month of January 2024.

    This was disclosed in a statement signed on Tuesday by Austine Elemue, senior media adviser to the FCT Minister of State, Dr. Mariya Mahmoud.

    While the allocation represents a decline from the N4,816,227,915.56bn shared in December 2023, the FCT Minister of State expressed gratitude to the Joint Account Allocation Committee (JAAC) for their dedication over the years.

    According to the statement, a breakdown of the figures released during the JAAC meeting indicates that the sum of N1,974,953,351.98bn was made available for distribution to the six area councils, while the sum of N2,464,306,340.80bn was made available to other stakeholders, bringing the total sum to N4,439,259,692.78bn.

    Similarly, distributions to the six area councils show that the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC) received N475,421,723.87m, while Gwagwalada got N310,030,283,.46m and Kuje received N327,514,383.83m.

    Other area councils include, Bwari Area Council which received N302,898,519.21m, Abaji got N254,139,116.13m while Kwali received N304,949,325.48m, bringing the total sum to N1,974,953,351.98bn disbursed to the six area councils.

    The remaining N2,464,306,340.80bn was allocated to critical stakeholders, including N2,085,585,348.67bn for Primary School Teachers, N226,478,989.57m for 15 percent Pension Funds, N44,392,596.93m for One percent Training Fund, and N107,849,405.63m for 10 percent Employer Pension Contribution.

    Those present at the 186th Joint Account Allocation Committee (JAAC) meeting include the Senior Special Assistant on Administration and Strategy to FCT Minister of State, Dr. Abdullahi Isah Kauramata, Mandate Secretary Area Council Services, Hon. Bitrus Garki, Director of Funds, Mrs. Anthonia Unigwe, and the Director of Finance and Administration in Area Council Secretariat, Mrs. Omolola Olanipekun.

    Others include the Chairman of Abuja Municipal Area Council, Hon. Christopher Maikalagun, and representatives of the chairman of Kwali area council, Kuje area council, and Gwagwalada area council amongst others.

    AMAC Gets Lion’s Share As FCTA Disburses N4bn To Six Area Councils, Others is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Fact Check: Lawmakers shared misleading claims at Robert Hur hearing on Biden classified documents

    Testifying before Congress, former Special Counsel Robert Hur defended his February report detailing Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents, saying it neither exonerated nor disparaged the current president. House Judiciary Committee members compared and contrasted Biden’s case with former President Donald Trump’s classified documents investigation.    

    In his report, Hur concluded that criminal charges were not warranted but criticized Biden’s practices in handling sensitive documents. Hur wrote that his investigation found evidence that Biden had “willfully retained and disclosed classified materials” as a private citizen after serving as vice president.

    During the March 12 hearing in Washington, Democratic lawmakers said Biden cooperated with investigators whereas Trump tried to thwart them. Republican lawmakers countered that Biden was treated differently from Trump. 

    “But then you apply this senile cooperator theory, that because Joe Biden cooperated and the elevator didn’t go to the top floor, you don’t think you get a conviction,” Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla. said.

    Hur defended his report’s characterization of Biden’s faulty memory. “I could not make that determination without assessing the president’s state of mind,” he said. 

    The release of the transcript of interviews between Hur’s team and Biden also shed new light on an exchange about Biden’s deceased son, Beau Biden.

    We fact-checked a few claims made by lawmakers that were missing context or misleading.

    Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif.: “Here’s the problem: Donald Trump is being prosecuted for exactly the same act that you’ve documented that Joe Biden committed.”

    This is misleading. 

    Trump was indicted in June 2023 on about three dozen counts, including willful retention of national defense information, conspiracy to obstruct justice and making false statements. 

    “Trump’s indictment alleges a pattern of deliberate and willful behavior and lying to federal investigators that Hur does not find in the Biden investigation,” Joan Meyer, who has worked as a federal and local level prosecutor and is now a partner at the law firm Thompson Hine LLP, told PolitiFact. 

    Hur’s report drew several distinctions between his Biden investigation and Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigation of Trump’s handling of classified documents. 

    Hur wrote in his report that Trump’s case had “several material distinctions” from Biden’s, including that Biden cooperated with the investigation while Trump thwarted federal efforts to retrieve documents. 

    Biden “turned in classified documents to the National Archives and the Department of Justice, consented to the search of multiple locations including his homes, sat for a voluntary interview, and in other ways cooperated with the investigation,” Hur wrote. 

    Biden’s lawyers discovered the documents Nov. 2, 2022, and notified the National Archives and Records Administration the same day.

    Hur wrote that according to Trump’s indictment, the former president “not only refused to return the documents for many months, but he also obstructed justice by enlisting others to destroy evidence and then to lie about it.”

    Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y.: “The Hur report represents the complete and total exoneration of President Biden.”

    Multiple former prosecutors told us that prosecutors typically recommend for or against prosecution but do not “exonerate.” 

    The Merriam-Webster dictionary says exonerate “implies a complete clearance from an accusation or charge and from any attendant suspicion of blame or guilt.” 

    Hur didn’t use the word “exonerate” in his report, and he pointed that out during his testimony. “That is not a word I use in the report and that’s not part of my task as a prosecutor,” Hur said after U.S. Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., repeated the term.   

    “Hur’s report finds insufficient evidence to prosecute President Biden because the evidence he generated is not likely to secure a criminal conviction,” Meyer said. “That is the standard that federal prosecutors use to determine whether to charge. Declining to charge is not the same as exonerating a defendant. Prosecutors only determine if the weight of the evidence supports prosecution and conviction beyond a reasonable doubt.”

    Kendall Coffey, a former U.S. Attorney in the Southern District of Florida, agreed that prosecutors do not typically describe a decision not to bring charges as an “exoneration.”

    He said a prosecutor might use the term “exonerate” when there is a determination of innocence through evidence such as DNA, rather than simply a decision not to prosecute.

    Nadler’s mention of “exoneration” was a reference to Trump, who said Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s 2019 report “exonerated” Trump of colluding with Russia to tip the 2016 presidential election in his favor. Mueller said the report hadn’t done so.

    Rep. Madeleine Dean, D-Pa.: “Your report on Page 208 says that Mr. Biden couldn’t come up with the date, the year, of his son Beau Biden’s death, when in fact in the transcript it shows that you asked him the month. And you know what he said Mr. Hur? He said, ‘Oh, God, May 30.’ Would you like to correct the record? His memory was pretty firm on the month and the day.”

    The transcript of Hur’s interview with Biden didn’t show Hur asking what month Beau Biden died. But Biden did identify the month and day unprompted.

    Hur asked Biden about where he kept papers related to a book in progress and a cancer research initiative. Biden responded with a story that started with him asking Hur whether the time frame in question was “2017, 2018, that area?”

    Hur said yes. Biden answered, “Remember, in this time frame, my son is — either been deployed or is dying,” and discussed his thinking about running for president. Then Biden said, “And, and so what was happening, though — what month did Beau die? Oh, God, May 30th.”

    Two other people in the room, one named and one unnamed in the transcript, entered the conversation, saying, “2015.”

    Biden: “Was it 2015 he had died?”

    An unidentified male speaker said, “It was May of 2015.” 

    Biden: “It was 2015.”

    Hur wrote in his report that Joe Biden “did not remember, even within several years, when his son Beau died.” 

    Biden later recounted this conversation at a Feb. 8 press conference and said the special counsel asked him a question about Beau’s death, even though the transcript shows that is not how Beau Biden’s name came up during the interview.

    “I know there’s some attention paid to some language in the report about my recollection of events. There’s even a reference that I don’t remember when my son died. How in the hell dare he raise that? Frankly, when I was asked the question, I thought to myself it wasn’t any of their damn business,” Biden said.

    Hur’s lawyer, William Burck, said Dean’s “implication was that he had asked Biden when his son died. The transcript speaks for itself. Hur did not ask him that.”

    PolitiFact Staff Writers Maria Ramirez Uribe and Ian McKinney contributed to this report.

    RELATED: President Biden said he didn’t have highly classified documents. The special counsel says otherwise.

    RELATED: Trump says he ‘cooperated far more’ than Biden in classified documents cases. Pants on Fire!

    RELATED: Fact-checking Joe Biden about sharing classified materials, keeping them in lockable cabinets 



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  • SF Giants’ Patrick Bailey hit on hand by ball, averts worst-case result

    PHOENIX — The San Francisco Giants got a scare Tuesday when their starting catcher, Patrick Bailey, was forced to depart their Cactus League game against the Dodgers.

    On a pitch from Blayne Enlow in the bottom of the third inning, Freddie Freeman swung, fouling off the ball, which struck Bailey’s throwing hand. The 24-year-old catcher finished the inning behind the plate but was replaced by Jakson Reetz to begin the fourth inning.

    The team later announced that Bailey had suffered a right hand contusion, or bruise, averting the worst-case scenario of a possible fracture. He underwent a set of X-rays, which came back clean, manager Bob Melvin said.

    “Hopefully that remains the case,” Melvin said. “As long as it’s not broken, I don’t care.”

    Bailey was not available to comment.

    After debuting last year as one of the top defensive catchers in the majors, the former first-round pick is central to the Giants’ plans this season. Behind him on the depth chart are Tom Murphy, brought in on a two-year free-agent contract, and Reetz, a non-roster invitee.

    If Bailey were forced to miss time, that could open a path to the roster for Joey Bart, who cannot be sent to the minors without being placed on waivers.

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  • ‘American Society Of Magical Negroes’ Star And Director Get The Skepticism

    Justice Smith stars as “Aren” and David Alan Grier stars as “Roger” in writer/director Kobi Libii’s “The American Society of the Magical Negroes.” (Courtesy of Focus Features via CNN Newsource)

    By Lisa Respers France, CNN

    (CNN) — When the first trailer for the film “The American Society of Magical Negroes” debuted late last year, some people misunderstood the intent of the film or expressed disappointment it wasn’t a Black “Harry Potter.”

    “Hollywood historically has not done well by Black people and so it makes sense that Black audiences are skeptical when there’s a movie about race,” Justice Smith, who stars in the film as the main character, told CNN. “This film, it’s controversial, even in the title, and so it’s gonna ruffle some feathers.”

    A satirical romantic comedy, “The American Society of Magical Negroes” centers on Aren, played by Smith, an unassuming young man recruited to be part of a fictional secret society of Black people who use their powers to make white people feel comfortable.

    The film’s title references a trope in films and television, coined by Spike Lee, in which Black secondary characters exist solely to help white primary characters.

    Director Kobi Libii told CNN the rom-com aspect of the project is as important as the satire.

    “It’s a film about being looked at like a stereotype and how reducing and degrading that gaze is,” he said. “And the opposite of being looked at like a stereotype is being looked at by somebody who loves you.”

    Neither Libii nor Smith took the reaction to the film’s first trailer personally.

    “I hope when people see the film, they get the full context of what we’re trying to say,” Smith said.

    Based on some of his own experiences as a Black man, Libii said he hopes the movie will spark “productive conversation about race.”

    Casting Smith, a light-skinned Black man, has already stirred conversation and controversy, given the role that colorism has often played in discussions about race.

    Smith said that Libii, who is also lighter-skinned, addresses the “false promise of assimilation” in the story.

    “It’s this idea that palatability will save you and what we’re saying is that it won’t,” Smith said. “Our casting is showing that these essentially passable, palatable people of color, who talk a certain way, who dress a certain way, who are light-skinned, who appease and appeal are still not given a seat at the table.”

    “No matter what, they will still be excluded and neglected,” he added. “And I think that sharpens the satire in that way.”

    “If even a Black person who looks like Justice and a fair woman of color, like our female romantic lead played by An-Li [Bogan], if even those people aren’t given the full privileges of whiteness, then to me it puts the lie to the argument that if you just behave a certain palatable way, you’ll be included,” Libii said. “That’s just not true and so it sharpens that critique.”

    Even with all that, Libii said it’s still a universal film.

    “I think that white audiences will get a lot out of this. It is very specifically a story about my experience as a Black person,” he said. “It’s not every Black person’s experience, it’s my particular Black experience, but I think there is a real pleasure in watching a journey that’s specific to someone else and specific to someone else’s culture. I know I can empathize with stories of people from different cultures and I would like to hope that white audiences will be able to empathize with my particular journey.”

    “The American Society of Magical Negroes” is in theaters Friday.

    The-CNN-Wire
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  • Trump to stump for Moreno ahead of Ohio Senate GOP primary

    Former President Trump is slated to stump for Republican candidate Bernie Moreno on Saturday ahead of the Ohio Senate GOP primary next week. 

    Trump’s campaign announced Monday that he would be a special guest speaker in Vandalia, Ohio, for a Buckeye Values PAC rally. That PAC wrote in a statement on X, the formerly Twitter, that it would be hosting a rally for Moreno and Trump. 

    The former president endorsed Moreno in December in the race to take on Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio). Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose (R) and state Sen. Matt Dolan (R) are also running for the seat. 

    Moreno has won endorsements from Ohio Republicans Sen. JD Vance and Rep. Jim Jordan, while Dolan has received the backing of Gov. Mike DeWine (R) and former Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio).

    But Trump’s appearance on Saturday is his most public involvement yet in the primary race, which takes place March 19.

    An Emerson College Polling survey released last month found Brown leading all of his GOP challengers, though Dolan is trailing the Ohio Democrat by the smallest margin, at 1 point. LaRose and Moreno both trail Brown by 2 points.

    All of the hypothetical matchups fall within the poll’s margin of error, which is plus or minus 2.3 percentage points.

    The nonpartisan election handicapper Cook Political Report rates the seat as a “toss up.” 

    Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



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  • Must-See Rant! State Rep. Shows Fellow Politicians How To Stand For Voters, Not Bureaucrats & Corporations


    ‘I a hundred percent am gonna listen to the people back home who I represent in this house,’ says rising GOP rep.

    Republican South Carolina State Representative Adam Morgan delivered a fiery speech from the state capitol this week, slamming his peers for bowing to pressure from Washington, D.C. lobbyists and bureaucrats.

    Discussing a bill being voted on by the state legislature, Morgan told his colleagues, “I get that the people in Columbia, that the lobby wants me to either not vote or vote green on this, but my constituents want me to vote red and they want their tax money spent on core government functions, on their roads, on their schools, that’s what they want their money spent on.”

    Democrat South Carolina State Rep. Todd Rutherford pressed Morgan on his stance by claiming the politicians know more than the people in his district because they have experience in making major deals.

    Rutherford told Morgan he shouldn’t listen to the people in his district because they “may not have ever brokered a deal, may not understand what it means being a project, may not understand incentives.”

    • URGENT! Keep Alex Jones in the fight against the NWO! Please pray & contribute at DefendJones.com today!

    “So, what you’re suggesting is we should listen to the people back home in your district rather than the people at commerce that have been successful at bringing these mega deals to South Carolina?” the out-of-touch representative asked Morgan.

    The GOP rep. scoffed and told Rutherford he couldn’t disagree with him more fundamentally, saying, “I a hundred percent am gonna listen to the people back home who I represent in this house and you should go listen to the 40,000 people in your area and not the bureaucrats at commerce and not the lobbyists and not the multi-billion dollar international corporations. YOU should listen to your constituents like I am.”

    He added, “So, yes, I will always fall back on the common sense of the wonderful people from Taylors and Greenville East Side far more than I will ever listen to you unelected bureaucrats, other representatives in here who have been here for far too long and have maybe managed a whole lot of these deals and far more than I will ever listen to any member out there in the lobby.”

    Morgan is the Chairman of the South Carolina Freedom Caucus and is currently challenging Rep. William Timmons (R-SC) for his House seat. 





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  • How Correctional Officers Killed An Escaping Convict To Start Wuse Market Unrest – Police

    Wuse-market-fire

    The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Police Command has clarified the circumstances leading to the civil unrest at the Wuse market on Tuesday.

    The FCT Police Commissioner, Benneth Igwe who led a team of operatives to the scene, narrated through a statement on Tuesday, how a convict’s attempt to escape snowballed into chaos and unrest in the Wuse area.

    The statement signed by the spokesperson of the command, Josephine Ade, disclosed that the situation started when one Ibrahim Yahaya, 27, was apprehended by operatives of the Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB) Task Force.

    He was subsequently taken before a mobile court which sits every Tuesday in Wuse Market, and he was convicted.

    “Suspect alongside others were being conveyed to the prison, when he reportedly jumped from the vehicle and took to his heels in an attempt to escape.

    “Two armed corrections personnel who were in the vehicle went after him and in the process, shot him.

    “The said Ibrahim Yahaya was immediately rushed to a nearby hospital where doctors on the ground confirmed him dead,” the police revealed.

    The command further noted that the development led some irate mobs who witnessed the situation to set ablaze eight vehicles and 10 shops in the environment.

    “The whole fire situation erupted uproar from residents but was brought under control by the combined effort of Federal fire service and other security agencies present,” the police said.

    The FCT CP further assured residents to go about their lawful businesses without fear as “normalcy has since been restored” and investigation is ongoing.

    How Correctional Officers Killed An Escaping Convict To Start Wuse Market Unrest – Police is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

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  • Fact Check: No, proposed Canadian law wouldn’t ban Christianity or criminalize Bible quotes

    A proposed amendment to Canada’s criminal code regarding hate speech has some social media users claiming it would ban Christianity or allow Christians to be jailed for quoting the Bible.

    “Canada is passing a bill to essentially ban the idea of Christianity,” read a March 5 Instagram post’s caption. The post shared a screenshot of an X post that said, “Canada is the new North Korea. Bill proposes to jail Christians who quote the Bible in public and to jail pastors who preach against certain sins as guilty of hate crimes.”

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    The Instagram post didn’t specifically say what it was referring to, but the X post it shared linked to an article on a conservative website that made the accusations about Bill C-367 in Canada. We found other social media posts making similar claims.

    Bill C-367 was filed in November by Yves-François Blanchet, the leader of Canada’s Bloc Québécois party. 

    The bill does not mention Christianity or any other religion. It seeks to remove religious exemptions as a defense for inciting hatred, antisemitism, or violence, its author said. It doesn’t ban Christianity and wouldn’t lead to arrests for simply quoting the Bible. Under the bill’s terms, someone might be arrested if they are quoting the Bible while inciting violence and vilifying a group, but quoting the Bible is not in itself an offense, experts told PolitiFact.

    (Instagram screenshot)

    What is Bill C-367

    The bill sought to amend Canada’s criminal code in a section about hate propaganda. It proposed two changes to the code.

    • First, it proposed repealing paragraph 319(3)(b) of the code, which said a person can’t  be convicted of an offense for the willful promotion of hatred “if, in good faith, the person expressed or attempted to establish by an argument an opinion on a religious subject or an opinion based on a belief in a religious text.”

    • Second, it proposed repealing paragraph 319(3.1)(b), which said a person can’t be convicted for the willful promotion of antisemitism “if, in good faith, they expressed or attempted to establish by an argument an opinion on a religious subject or an opinion based on a belief in a religious text.”

    In a Nov. 28 Canadian Parliament debate, Blanchet told Prime Minister Justin Trudeau the bill was in response to threats against the Jewish community.

    “Mr. Speaker, gunfire has been heard in Montreal over the past few days. Windows have been broken, and graffiti has been directed specifically against the Jewish community,” Blanchet said. “There are fears that these actions were in some way encouraged by an exception in the Criminal code that allows hate speech and the incitement of violence.”

    Blanchet’s proposal does not refer to Christianity but critics argue that the changes could lead to charges against a Christian who made statements opposing the LGBTQ+ community.

    Joanie Riopel, the press secretary for Bloc Québécois, which Blanchet leads, told PolitiFact that in the context of the war between Israel and Hamas, hate speech, violence and antisemitism have increased in Quebec and Canada. Riopel cited a religious preacher in Montreal calling for the death of “Zionists” at a pro-Palestinian rally.

    Because of this, Bloc Québécois proposed Bill C-367, “the only purpose of which is to remove religious exemptions for public incitement to hatred, wilful promotion of hatred and wilful promotion of antisemitism,” Riopel said.

    The code as it stands “allow anyone to hide behind religion in the context of public incitement to hatred,” Riopel said.

    The bill has yet to make it past the first of three required readings in the House in Commons. If passed there, it would also need to make it through three readings in the Senate.

    In February, Alexis Brunelle-Duceppe, another Bloc Québécois member, offered a similar bill in the House of Commons, Bill C-373. It also has not moved past its initial reading there, but because of parliamentary rules, would be debated before C-367. The debate on the second reading of C-373 should happen before June 30, Riopel said.

    What experts say

    The proposed bill would not mean banning Christianity, said Richard Moon, a University of Windsor law professor who researches religious freedom and freedom of expression.

    “The Criminal Code hate speech ban extends only to speech that vilifies the members of a particular group — racial, religious, etc. The speech must be extreme, for example, describing the group members as subhuman or as inherently dangerous,” Moon said. “I’m not sure what a Christian might say that would be so extreme.”

    Moon said a Christian simply saying that homosexuality is sinful wouldn’t be considered hate speech, but saying gays are pedophiles might.

    “But that is not, as far as I know, the view of any Christian group, or at least any mainstream group,” Moon said.

    Emmett Macfarlane, a University of Waterloo political science professor who studies online hate speech and free expression, called the claims about Bill C-367 “mostly nonsense.”

    “The exemptions that the bill would remove from the law would not change the very high threshold that must be met before any expression is deemed to be the wilful promotion of hatred or the wilful promotion of antisemitism,” said Macfarlane, who added that there is a very high bar in Canada’s hate speech law and few charges have been brought forward.

    Striking religious exemptions from the law wouldn’t prevent people quoting Bible passages or other texts generally, Macfarlane said.

    “An individual would almost certainly have to be incorporating additional extreme and incendiary speech in their expression to run afoul of the law, with or without the exemptions,” he said.

    Our ruling

    An Instagram post claimed that Canada is passing a bill to “essentially ban the idea of Christianity.”

    But the bill neither mentions Christianity, nor seeks to ban any religion. In response to antisemitic rhetoric during the Israel-Hamas war, its author proposed amending Canada’s criminal code regarding hate speech to remove religion as a defense for public incitement to hatred or antisemitism. The bill has not progressed in the House of Commons and is not close to being a law.

    Experts said simply quoting from a religious text such as the Bible wouldn’t result in hate speech charges, unless it was accompanied by extreme, explicit language. We rate the claim False.



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  • Warriors adjust to officiating changes NBA’s scoring explosion

    The 2016-17 Warriors, a superteam built around Steph Curry and Kevin Durant, led one of the most efficient offenses in NBA history. Their offensive rating of 115.6 is this year’s league average.

    The Boston Celtics are on their way to a new NBA record for offensive rating at 122.5, one year after the Sacramento Kings set the previous record. At this pace, the best offense in any given season is likely to become the most efficient in league history.

    Teams are averaging 115 points per game, 14 more than the league median a decade ago. A number of factors have contributed to the years-long, league-wide scoring boom, chief among them the 3-point revolution started by Curry and the Warriors themselves.

    Another major variable, though, is the way the game has been officiated. There’s a sentiment within the league that the NBA has tilted the rules and their enforcement too far in the direction of scoring. Players have smartly geared their games to draw more fouls, often baiting officials by initiating contact in clever ways to earn free throws — among the most efficient ways to score.

    “It’s never been easier to score in the league,” said Warriors assistant coach and acclaimed defensive mind Ron Adams, echoing Steve Kerr’s frustration earlier in the season.

    But the pendulum could be swinging back toward an equilibrium. Since the All-Star break, free throw rates and scoring overall have declined. The 76ers and Knicks combined for 152 points on Sunday night, the lowest game total since 2016. Last Sunday, half of the 16 teams that played failed to crack 100 points. Golden State scored a season-low 88 points in Boston a week ago.

    “Recently there’s been fewer garbage-type fouls,” Adams said. “Little incidental stuff, they’re letting them play a little more one way or another. I actually feel (recently) the balance has been a little better with offense and defense. You’ve got to be on your toes.”

    Although there haven’t been any midseason rule changes, referees changing their tendencies isn’t unprecedented. Officials can tweak their points of emphasis to reflect what they deem they are or aren’t doing well. It’s understood that refs swallow their whistles more in the postseason.

    Draymond Green has noticed a change, and he’s not surprised.

    “Yeah, that’s usually how it goes when it’s playoff time, preparing for the playoffs,” Green said.

    If the refs are going to let players get away with more physicality, the Warriors (34-30) will have to contend with that environment. Even if Kerr said they’re “not necessarily” better equipped to play in games with fewer fouls, there’s evidence that they’re well prepared for that style.

    “We’re definitely not hurt by it because we don’t have anybody that’s any good at flopping,” Kerr said.

    The recent apparent change in officiating has been noted by national pundits like Tom Haberstroh, Ethan Sherwood Strauss and Bill Simmons. According to Action Network writer Matt Moore, foul rates on drives are down by 11% since the All-Star break, and the top five teams in free throw rate are down nearly 16%.

    “I feel like we’ve had more games where the refs have let the teams play a little bit, not call some of the ticky-tack stuff that was called early on in the season,” Kerr said Monday. “I’ve enjoyed it.”

    Adams, who has studied NBA box scores since he coached college ball in the early ‘70s, said he’s amazed at some of the free throw totals this year. Joel Embiid, Karl-Anthony Towns and Luka Doncic each scoring over 60 points in a single week was a flashpoint. They shot 23, 15 and 16 foul shots, respectively.

    Weeks before, the Nuggets defeated the Warriors in part by winning the free throw battle 32 to 23. The disparity was especially stark in the second half, irking Kerr: “It’s a parade to the free throw line, and it’s disgusting to watch,” he said postgame.

    “I have no problem with the officials themselves — all across the league, we have really good officials,” Kerr said then. “I have a problem with the way we’re legislating defense out of the game. That’s what we’re doing in the NBA. The way we’re teaching the officials, we’re just enabling players to BS their way to the foul line. If I were a fan, I wouldn’t have wanted to watch the second half of that game.”

    Before the All-Star break, the Warriors ranked 20th in defensive rating at 116.6. In 11 games since the break, in which more physical play is apparently being permitted, they rank sixth (109.0).

    That improvement has also coincided with rotation changes such as replacing Klay Thompson with Brandin Podziemski in the starting lineup, playing Draymond Green exclusively at center and giving Trayce Jackson-Davis a bigger role. But Golden State appears to be adapting well to the officiating tendencies.

    Adams and the coaching staff always have a lot on their plate in terms of defensive scheming in the pace-and-space age. But the foundation of any good defense, Adams said, is sound fundamentals, succinct rules to follow and personnel committed to playing aggressively.

    The most important, and toughest to acquire, is the third factor: personnel. In Green, Jackson-Davis, Jonathan Kuminga, Moses Moody, Gary Payton II and Andrew Wiggins, the Warriors have a solid core of athletic, heady defenders who should be capable of covering up for less gifted defenders’ deficiencies.

    If those types of players can get away with playing more physically, the Warriors could alter their strategies.

    “The league changes every few months, not even every season,” Adams said. “And so you’re constantly trying to make these adjustments. Trying to be innovative, think out of the box.”

    Fewer called fouls could help Golden State defensively. One of the Warriors’ biggest weaknesses defensively is sending too many opponents to the foul line. When they’ve struggled the most, the Warriors send too many opponents to the foul line. They rank 23rd in opposing free throws attempted and Kerr has routinely mentioned limiting fouls as the key to defensive improvement. After the All-Star break, Golden State ranks eighth in opponent free throws.

    On the other side, teams are bound to be more handsy with Steph Curry on the perimeter. That could have an effect, especially with the two-time MVP coming off a sprained right ankle, but it won’t be novel to Curry, who has dealt with every brand of defensive pressure throughout his 15-year career.

    Curry in particular and the Warriors in general don’t rely on getting to the line to score. A player like Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who takes four more free throws per game than Curry (who ranks 40th in attempts per game) could be more impacted by a quieter whistle.

    On Monday night in San Antonio, Green, Kuminga and Brandin Podziemski at various points threw their arms up in disbelief after their drives to the basket through contact went uncalled — when the same plays very well could have been whistled dead a couple months ago. But on the other end, Green and Jackson-Davis could be more physical with Victor Wembanyama, bodying him off his spot and challenging him tougher at the rim.

    At least for one Warrior, more aggression is always good.

    “Of course,” Green said when asked if he had noticed a change in officiating. “I love it.”

    While the league might believe that more scoring is the most fan-friendly brand of basketball, Adams holds that the game is at its best when there’s more of a balance between offense and defense. So might the Warriors.

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  • In Loving Memory Of Rosemary Jackson

    Rosemary “Rosie” Jackson. Sunrise December 14, 1948 – Sunset March 3, 2024.

    Rosemary Jackson affectionately called “Rosie” was born December 14, 1948, in Elkart TX, to the union of the late Loretta and L.C. Gipson.

    Rosemary moved to Seattle, WA in 1949 at a very young age (still scooting) with her parents and siblings. She was raised in the Yesler Terrace, attended Bailey Gatzert Elementary, Washington Middle School and Garfield High School. Rosemary married Louis Del Lockhart (deceased) and had one child from that union, Renee Michelle Estill. She married her best friend Woodrow Jackson and of that union three additional children were born: Glen, Evelyn and Joel Jackson.    

    Rosemary was the seventh in line of 11 children. Being considered one of the younger siblings, she was a true stand out in such a large family.  Most babies crawl before they walk, but not Rosemary, she never crawled.  When she was able to sit up on her own, she began to scoot with one leg to get to wherever she wanted to go. She was always very head strong and strong willed. As a child she would get spankings and would never ever, ever, cry, say “ouch”, flinch or make one sound. You only knew she was crying because tears would just roll down her face.  There was a time when her Aunt Fat told her mother, “You need to just stop spanking her because she is not going to cry”. She made up in her mind not to cry and she did not.  This was one of the many signs she was going to be a ‘stand out’ person and create her own path in life.

    After high school she started a singing group named The Fluorescents, which consisted of Bonnie Chapman and Carolyn Porter aka Kibibi Monie. This group was very popular and sang in several locations in the Seattle area. She was also a member of the Adult Choir at Beacon Hill 1st Baptist Church.

    Rosemary worked at Pacific Northwest Bell for seven years. In 1985, she and Woodrow opened up the legendary original Catfish Corner. She put her blood, sweat and tears into ensuring Catfish Corner was top notch. So much so, the restaurant won multiple awards at the various festivals, was featured in numerous media platforms including The Seattle Medium, The Facts, radio, TV, and even hosted several boat cruises around Puget Sound.   Of course we can’t go without mentioning her incredible creative ability, of which we all got to experience with Rosie’s Smarter Tarter. This is a testament her hard work and determination paying off. She was blessed to pass on her knowledge to her grandson Terrell Jackson, who is carrying the torch for his grandparents by maintaining the operation and legacy of Catfish Corner, which is now known as Jackson’s Catfish Corner.

    With all the success of Catfish Corner, Rosemary was more than Catfish Corner. She enjoyed trips to Las Vegas and Reno, NV, fishing and spending time with her family.  Rosemary and the family would take road trips to Disneyland, San Francisco, Texas and Louisiana. She was also an amazing cook, a trait that has passed down to her children. From the family sleepovers at the home on Beacon Hill to the one who would get the Electric Slide going at family gatherings, she loved and enjoyed being around her family. There were several times where the whole Gipson clan spent the weekend at their home on Guemes Island in Anacortes, WA, where they would all bask in the joy of eating her famous Lemon Lush pies, along with many other delicious dishes.

    Everyone knew when they saw Rosemary, she would be color-coordinated from head to toe, including her jewelry. Her hair was always on point, always smelling good wearing that White Diamonds perfume, a bougie diva with a lead foot. She was always extremely clean and meticulous and hated flies in her home and the restaurant, stopping whatever she was doing to kill that fly. If you were ever at the restaurant on MLK Jr Way and East Cherry Street, you heard her say in a sweet voice, “Excuse me,” and with a totally different tone, “Close that screen door, don’t let any flies in here!” and then, back to her sweet voice, she would smile and ask, “What will you be having today?”

    She was a beautiful woman full of integrity who wanted everything done right. It didn’t matter who you were; she treated everyone the same when it came to work ethics. All would agree to that, even some of her own family members who she fired. She was also very generous to those in need and did a lot of things for people without telling anyone. She did things out of the kindness of her heart and not for people to see.

    Rosemary gave up her battle to the Lord on March 3, 2024, because the battle was not hers; it belonged to the Lord. Her illness was draining and taxing on her body, but she endured the challenge. She was a strong woman of purpose, leaving behind a legacy, alongside her husband, Woodrow, of 57 years. Rosemary was a true pillar of Seattle, WA. She was a woman who fought a good fight and, through it all, kept her faith in the Almighty God.

    Rosemary is survived by her husband, Woodrow Jackson; children, Renee M. Estill, Glen Jackson, Evelyn Jackson, Joel Jackson; sister, Margaret Louise Livingston (Raymond); sister, Bobbie Golden; 13 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren, along with a host of cousins, nieces, nephews, and friends.

    The Celebration of Life service will be held on Sunday, March 17, 2024 from 3:00 pm to 7:00 pm at The Collective, in Downtown Seattle, 400 Dexter Avenue North, Seattle WA. 98109.

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