Jake Retzlaff reportedly commits to Tulane after withdrawing from BYU due to honor-code violationNew Foto - Jake Retzlaff reportedly commits to Tulane after withdrawing from BYU due to honor-code violation

Former BYU quarterback Jake Retzlaff has found a new home. Retzlaff reportedly committed to Tulane, and is expected toenroll as a walk-on, according to Pete Thamel of ESPN. After starting with BYU last season, Retzlaff will compete for the starting job at Tulane. Retzlaff, who spent two years with the Cougars, officially withdrew from BYU in July after a violation of the honor code threatened his season. The redshirt senior, who was in trouble with the school for engaging in premarital sex,had reportedly been looking to transfer schoolsas a result. In a statement posted to social media, Retzlaff disclosed his decision to withdraw, calling BYU "a place of growth." "After a lot of prayer, reflection, and conversations with those I trust, I've made the difficult decision to officially withdraw from BYU and step away from the BYU Football program," Retzlaff wrote. "I'm excited to turn the page and embrace the next chapter." By withdrawing from BYU directly, Retzlaff did not have to enter the transfer portal in order to land with a new program. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Jake Retzlaff (@jretz11) In a lawsuit filed in May, Retzlaff wasaccused of sexually assaulting a woman in 2023. The lawsuit waseventually dismissed last month after a joint motionfrom the attorneys of Retzlaff and his accuser. However, Retzlaff, who said that the sex was consensual in his court filing, was still in violation of BYU's honor code, which prohibits premarital sex. As a result, Retzlaff was reportedly facing a seven-game suspension from the school — prompting his decision to transfer. Retzlaff joined BYU in 2023 after playing for two years at the community college level. He became BYU's starting quarterback in 2024, leading the team to a 11-2 season and an Alamo Bowl victory over Colorado. Retzlaff threw for 2,947 yards and 20 touchdowns this season, completing 57.9 percent of his passes.

Jake Retzlaff reportedly commits to Tulane after withdrawing from BYU due to honor-code violation

Jake Retzlaff reportedly commits to Tulane after withdrawing from BYU due to honor-code violation Former BYU quarterback Jake Retzlaff has f...
Is Chris Paul joining the best Clippers team of his career?New Foto - Is Chris Paul joining the best Clippers team of his career?

As he enters his 21st and final NBA season, Chris Paul has decided to spend it in Los Angeles with a team he's all too familiar with. Paul is expected to sign with the Clippers, putting a period on what has been an absolutely tremendous offseason for the organization after acquiring John Collins, Brook Lopez and Bradley Beal as well. Paul, who is now 40, just came off a year in San Antonio in which he started all 82 games, proving he's still very capable of being an impact player. The point guard might have had pedestrian numbers (8.8 points and 7.4 assists per game) compared to his prime, but the stats only tell part of the story. He'll join a Clippers team where the ball will be in the hands of James Harden and Kawhi Leonard a fair bit, meaning he's likely to play a role that supports him being even more opportunistic in regard to establishing himself. With Collins and Derrick Jones Jr. on the roster, Paul will have several lob targets at his disposal, just as he'll have shooters who can fill the wing in the form of Bogdan Bogdanović and Beal, who is likely to play a not insignificant amount of minutes alongside Paul. The addition of Paul, in conjunction with the organization's other moves this summer, has catapulted the Clippers into contender status, at least assuming Leonard is as healthy as he looked in the playoffs against the Denver Nuggets. The depth chart of the team is rather ridiculous as well. If we assume a starting lineup of Harden, Beal, Leonard, Collins and Ivica Zubac, the secondary rotation will consist of Paul, Bogdanović, Nicolas Batum, Jones and Lopez, forming one of the most potent 10-man rotations in the NBA. Paul's leadership qualities might allow him to take the starting spot over Beal, but if so, the Clippers will only have an even stronger scoring punch on their second unit. While this won't be at all similar to the Lob City version of the Clippers, with Paul feeding Blake Griffin and DeAndre Jordan, there's a case to be made that this could be the best Clippers team Paul has ever been on.

Is Chris Paul joining the best Clippers team of his career?

Is Chris Paul joining the best Clippers team of his career? As he enters his 21st and final NBA season, Chris Paul has decided to spend it i...
Emma Meesseman will join the Liberty in her return to the WNBA, AP source saysNew Foto - Emma Meesseman will join the Liberty in her return to the WNBA, AP source says

NEW YORK (AP) — Emma Meesseman, the 2019 WNBA Finals MVP who last played in the league in 2022, is joining the New York Liberty, a person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press on Monday. The timing of the arrival of the 32-year-old from Belgium in the U.S. will be determined by how long it takes to get her visa, according to the person who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because no official announcement has been made. ESPN first reported Meesseman's decision. The two-time All-Star, who helped the Washington Mystics win the 2019 title, has been focused on leading the Belgium national team since her last season in the WNBA, which she spent with the Chicago Sky. Meesseman played with Natasha Cloud, whom New York acquired in the offseason, in Washington when the Mystics won their championship six years ago. Meesseman helped Belgium win the EuroBasket title last month to qualify for next year's World Cup. She joins a stacked New York team with Breanna Stewart, Jonquel Jones and Sabrina Ionescu that won its first championship last year. The 6-foot-4 forward also considered Minnesota and Phoenix. The Liberty currently sit second in the standings, 3 1/2 games behind the Lynx. Meesseman has dominated overseas in her time away from the WNBA. She was named the EuroBasket MVP twice in the past three years. And she helped Belgium reach the medal round at the Paris Olympics before it lost to France in overtime in the semifinals and then Australia in the bronze-medal game. New York signed Australian forward Stephanie Talbot earlier Monday. She was waived by Golden State last week. ___ AP WNBA:https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball

Emma Meesseman will join the Liberty in her return to the WNBA, AP source says

Emma Meesseman will join the Liberty in her return to the WNBA, AP source says NEW YORK (AP) — Emma Meesseman, the 2019 WNBA Finals MVP who ...
Trump posts fake AI-video showing Obama being arrested with 'YMCA' and meme turned hate symbolNew Foto - Trump posts fake AI-video showing Obama being arrested with 'YMCA' and meme turned hate symbol

PresidentDonald Trumpreposted avideo on Truth Socialthat showed a fake, artificially rendered scene of formerPresident Barack Obamabeing arrested. The July 20 post on social was a TikTok video by an account named "neo8171," with a montage of Democratic elected officials saying "no one is above the law." While it is unclear where the clips were from, Democrats have used that phrase when talking about Trump's criminal cases, including anarrest in Georgiaand afelony convictionin New York. The video then showsPepe the Frog, a popular internet meme that was added to a hate symbol database during the 2016 election. As"YMCA"starts to play, the video shows Trump and Obama sitting in the Oval Office, and an artificially rendered scene shows FBI agents dragging Obama out of his chair and cuffing his hands behind his back. The fake video then shows Obama in an orange jumpsuit in jail. A representative for Obama declined to comment about the fake AI video. Trump and Pepe the Frog:2016 campaign turned meme political. Then it became a hate symbol On July 18, Director of National IntelligenceTulsi Gabbardissued a press release saying she had evidence that the Obama administration after the 2016 election produced "politicized intelligence that was used as the basis for countless smears seeking to delegitimizePresident Trump's victory." In 2020, aRepublican-led, bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committeebacked the conclusion of the intelligence agencies that found Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election in favor of Trump. Trump had long said the investigation into his campaign was a hoax. Ranking Member on the Intelligence CommitteeRep. Jim Himes, D-Connecticut,said Gabbard's new claim is a "dangerous lie," while speaking on CBS News' "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," on July 20. He said Gabbard is using a "sleight of hand" by focusing on intelligence about Russia's failed voting infrastructure manipulation rather than Russia's meddling to discredit Trump's 2016 Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton. Appearing on Fox News'"Sunday Morning Futures," Gabbard said she intended to send her findings to the Department of Justice and the FBI for criminal referral. Trump also shared excerpts from Gabbard's interviews to Truth Social. "As is always the case, President Trump was right about the Obama-Biden administration's clear involvement in the greatest witch hunt in American history and the genesis of the decade-long hoax saga that tore our nation apart and undermined the will of the people," White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said in an emailed statement. "The President and his entire administration are committed to unearthing wrongdoing and holding any individual accountable for this gross abuse of power and blatant conspiracy against President Trump and his supporters." The frog doodle in clown accessories that flashes in the video is known as Pepe the Frog, and its appearance in Trump's social media posts has sparked interest before. Pepe the Frogstarted as a character from a comic series, "Boy's Club" by Matt Furie in 2005, according to Know Your Meme. While the somewhat sad-looking frog did not have racist or antisemitic origins, its proliferation through the internet as a meme led to its adaptation into something of a symbol for single men who felt they were on the social outskirts,Know Your Meme editorBrad Kim told the New York Times in 2016. But Kim said it became political whenTrump shared a Trump-ified version of Pepein October 2015. "Pepe plugged into the ideology of the alt-right because it was a reaction against the people they call 'normies,'" Kim told the New York Times. "Pepe had been a symbol of the disenfranchised, social outcasts. It was Trump's natural audience." In 2016, theAnti-Defamation Leagueadded Pepe the Frog to its list of hate symbols, though the organization notes many uses of this meme are still not rooted in bigotry or hate. "The number of 'alt right' Pepe memes has grown, a tendency exacerbated by the controversial and contentious 2016 presidential election," Pepe's ADL page states. "However, because so many Pepe the Frog memes are not bigoted in nature, it is important to examine use of the meme only in context." Contributing: Kevin Johnson, Kristine Phillips, USA TODAY Kinsey Crowley is the Trump Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach her at kcrowley@gannett.com. Follow her on X and TikTok @kinseycrowley or Bluesky at @kinseycrowley.bsky.social. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump posts video of Obama being arrested on Truth Social. It is fake

Trump posts fake AI-video showing Obama being arrested with ‘YMCA’ and meme turned hate symbol

Trump posts fake AI-video showing Obama being arrested with 'YMCA' and meme turned hate symbol PresidentDonald Trumpreposted avideo ...
The Difference Between Gerrymandering and RedistrictingNew Foto - The Difference Between Gerrymandering and Redistricting

Organizations and individuals gather outside the Supreme Court as gerrymandering cases are argued on Tuesday, March 26, 2019. Credit - Aurora Samperio—Getty Images Texas Republicans are poised to consider new districts in a special session after President Donald Trump called for the state to redraw its congressional map to allow for the GOP to pick up seats in the midterm elections in 2026. Trump told reportersthat there are several states in which he believes Republicans can redraw districts in order to pick up seats in Congress and keep a narrow majority. "Texas would be the biggest one," he said on July 16. "Just a very simple redrawing, we pick up five seats." Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott put redistricting onhis special session agendafor Monday. Abbott said his decision was in light of aletterhe received from the Department of Justice earlier this month. The letter alleges that four of the current districts were racial gerrymanders that violate the Constitution's 14th Amendment, thus opening the door for redistricting as a whole to be decided. Typically, states redraw their congressional district maps every ten years to accommodate shifts in population. But in many states, lawmakers have taken to changing the lines whenever they see it as politically advantageous to help their party gain an advantage." The fact that Trump and Texas Republicans are currently weighing their options of redistricting in the middle of a decade is non-traditional, but not completely unheard of. But the move has, unsurprisingly, raised concerns and discussions about gerrymandering. Read More:To End Gerrymandering, Change How We Elect Congress California Gov. Gavin Newsom of the Democratic Party has vowed to retaliate by redistricting his own state's 52 seats to pick up more Democratic representation. "Trump said he's going to steal five Congressional seats in Texas and gerrymander his way into a 2026 win. Well, two can play that game," Newsomsaid via Xon July 15. "Special sessions. Special elections. Ballot initiatives. New laws. It's all on the table when democracy is on the line." Beyond any potential retaliation, Republicans risk a lot in redistricting, says Jay Dow, a professor of political science at the University of Missouri. "If you cut [the margins] too thin, you can really put your own party in danger," Dow notes. "If you make those margins too thin and you have a bad year, you can end up losing four or five seats instead of gaining them." This can be referred to as a "dummymander." Ismar Volić, a professor at Wellesley College who has done research on how mathematics can equalize redistricting, argues that Trump's attitude towards redistricting points to how "okay everyone is" with partisan gerrymandering. "The courts say this is politics as usual," he says. "Anyone who cares about some kind of fairness, representation, or competitiveness in our democracy would think it's terrible that the President is so open about it. But it's not illegal." Here is what you need to know about redistricting and gerrymandering, and the difference. Redistricting is a process of drawing the borders of districts for which representatives are elected. As states grow, they often do not grow evenly, and thus redistricting allows for states to represent population growth and racial diversity in their cities—according to the Constitution, all districts in a state must have equal population. "We reapportion the House seats in response to the census, and so every 10 years we do the census, and that changes the number of House seats. Some states get more, some states get fewer because of internal shifts in population," explains Dow. "Now, the legislature will have to draw the boundaries of these districts to reflect that." Often, this can reflect people moving from rural areas to urban areas, or from state to state. For example, as a result of the 2020 Census, Florida gained a seat in the House, while states including California and Illinois lost a seat. Read More:Gerrymandering Isn't New—But Now We Have a Solution According to Richard Briffault, a professor at Columbia Law School, gerrymandering is a "pejorative" for a kind of redistricting that favors a political party, or in some cases, looks todisenfranchise a group of people. There are two principle ways that a legislature can gerrymander for partisan purposes, says Briffault. Packing and cracking. "With packing, you put as many of the voters of the other party into one district. Instead of the voters being equally spread around so they get an influence on a lot of places, they are in one district," Briffault says. Whereas with cracking, those creating maps would split a voting bloc—be that a specific party affiliation or a certain demographic—across multiple districts to dilute voting power, making it difficult for them to elect their preferred candidates. Briffault says in a scenario where Republicans would try to use cracking in a district with a lot of Democrats, they could "carve it up into multiple districts and make [Democrats] the minority in several other districts, so that they're dispersed and they're never going to be the dominant force in any one district." There are several tells, Briffault says, that a district has been gerrymandered. But it tends to be a hard legal battle as it's not always clear-cut. In fact, courts will often disagree on whether a district has been gerrymandered. Briffault says that if the process is done entirely by one party with no input from another party, it is more likely to be gerrymandering. If it is done mid-cycle, rather than based on new population data, then that's another warning sign. Lastly, experts recommend looking to the shape of the states. Districts drawn with "odd shapes" to capture some "small group" is also "evidence of gerrymandering," according to Briffault. Experts emphasize the difference in legality between partisan gerrymandering and racial gerrymandering. The Supreme Court ruled in the 2019 case "Rucho v. Common Cause" that partisan gerrymandering isnotsubject to a federal court review, because they present non-"justiciable" political questions that lie outside of the court's jurisdiction. "In a handful of states, there are limits on gerrymandering, or there are special procedures for redistricting that make gerrymandering more difficult, but as a matter of federal law, the Supreme Court said it's not unconstitutional," Briffault says. Volić calls this court case a "watershed" moment in redistricting. As such, people trying to detect partisan gerrymandering can "only rely on" state supreme court or state judicial systems. He argues these judicial systems are "often faulty because they have been appointed by state legislature," the same body that is likely working on the redistricting. In terms of racial gerrymandering, the Supreme Court has said that thiscanbe challenged. Dow points to the 2023 Supreme Courtdecisionthat claimed Alabama's redistricting was not "simply a partisan gerrymander" by Republicans but actually a "racial gerrymander," and those district lines were subject to revision. Though Black Alabamians accounted for around 30% of the state at the time, they could only elect one of their preferred candidates in the state's seven districts, according tothe Brennan Center for Justice. When the Republican-controlled legislature failed to create a second district in which the Black population had a fair shot,a federal court created one, which eventually led to the state's election of Democratic Rep. Shomari Figures. Although acknowledging the difference, Volić says the line between "partisan" and "racial" gerrymandering tends to be "thin," and in order for courts to tell states that they need to redistrict fairly, "you have to argue that the line has been crossed." In 2024, the Supreme Courtruled in favor of South Carolina Republicans, arguing that what a lower court said was a racial gerrymander that diluted the African American vote was, in fact, a partisan gerrymander. Just this past week, the Florida Supreme Court, which is dominated by appointees hand-picked by the state's Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis,uphelda congressional district map that eliminated a majority-Black district in north Florida, which DeSantis had chopped up following the 2020 census, dispersing the Black population into four different majority white districts. Volić says the last 20 years have been "terrible for gerrymandering," though he points to some progress, such as efforts to place redistricting in the hands of independent commissions and the role of mathematicians in recent years to create congressional maps that "rationally" create districts "detached from politics and partisanship." The issue is convincing legislatures to give up their power, and to do so in a timely manner, even if the courts have ruled that a district has been unfairly gerrymandered. The judicial system is "tectonically slow moving," Volić says, and while parties argue it at the court level, the U.S. continues to "conduct elections in these terrible maps." "Even if the final outcome is favorable to minorities or whoever is being disenfranchised, the damage has already been done in many ways," Volić argues. "This is a system that's very conducive to taking power away in a nefarious way." Contact usatletters@time.com.

The Difference Between Gerrymandering and Redistricting

The Difference Between Gerrymandering and Redistricting Organizations and individuals gather outside the Supreme Court as gerrymandering cas...

 

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