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Trump Demands Return Of Offensive Sports Team Names
Trump Demands Return Of Offensive Sports Team Names

Buzz Feed

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Buzz Feed

Trump Demands Return Of Offensive Sports Team Names

Donald Trump has continuously tried to assert his power as president in the sports world, and most recently, he's taken to Truth Social to demand that two professional sports team bring back their controversial team names, "immediately." In a recent Truth Social post, Trump wrote: "The Washington 'Whatever's' should IMMEDIATELY change their name back to the Washington Redskins Football Team. There is a big clamoring for this. Likewise, the Cleveland Indians, one of the six original baseball teams, with a storied past." "Our great Indian people, in massive numbers, want this to happen. Their heritage and prestige is systematically being taken away from them. Times are different now than they were three or four years ago. We are a Country of passion and common sense. OWNERS, GET IT DONE!!!" Here's the full post: For context, the NFL team Washington Commanders (formerly known as the Washington Redskins) officially retired their 87-year-old team name on July 13, 2020, due to public pushback about the term "redskins" being offensive to the Indigenous community, who viewed it both as a "slur" and a "stereotype." Suzan Harjo, an advocate who fought for the name change and a member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho tribes, spoke to NPR about why it was so important: "If it's permissible to say such things to us, such names, then it is permissible to do anything to us," she said. "I had lots of things in my personal life using that word. When I was a girl, you barely could make it through your young life without getting attacked by a bunch of white people, whether they were boys or girls or men or women. And they would always go to that word." Similarly, the major league baseball team, the Cleveland Guardians (formerly known as the Cleveland Indians), officially changed its team name after the 2021 season. The team's owner, Paul Dolan, credited the "social unrest" in 2020, following the murder of George Floyd, with making him want to change his organization's name. "We do feel like we're doing the right thing and that's what's driving this,'' Dolan said, according to ESPN. "I know some people disagree, but if anything, I've gotten more and more comfortable that we're headed in the right direction." Here's what people had to say about Trump's most recent rant: One person called it a "desperate attempt to distract," seemingly from all of the recent news surrounding Trump and the Epstein files. "hes gonna convince his base that the natives want the old names back instead of telling u THEY are the reason the names were changed. telling natives they are 'loosing their heritage' over these names is laughable nobody talks about that shit anymore. nobody fucking cares but him." "The President of the United States going on about the name of a Football Team this Sunday morning is just another example of how batshit crazy this shitshow is." What are your thoughts? Let us know in the comments below.

Spot the Aussie: 2025 Winter Cup field at Rosehill Gardens a showcase for imports
Spot the Aussie: 2025 Winter Cup field at Rosehill Gardens a showcase for imports

News.com.au

time12-06-2025

  • Sport
  • News.com.au

Spot the Aussie: 2025 Winter Cup field at Rosehill Gardens a showcase for imports

It will be almost a case of 'spot the Aussie' when the Winter Cup field goes out onto the track at Rosehill Gardens on Saturday. There are 14 stayers entered for the Listed $200,000 race over 2400m with 12 of them born overseas including topweight Changingoftheguard, a son of the greatest European stallion influence this century, Galileo. Changingoftheguard is among four Irish-bred stayers in the race, while there's five from France, two from Great Britain and one from New Zealand. The only colonial stayers in the Winter Cup are Steel Blaze and Whisker To Whisker – and they are the rank outsiders at $71 and $151 respectively. But this is hardly a new phenomenon. Stayers born in the northern hemisphere make up the bulk of runners in feature Australian distance races these days. • PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet's team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW! Just look at the make-up of the Sydney Cup (3200m) run earlier this year. Of the 20 starters, 19 were born overseas including the winner, Arapaho. The only horse in the race that was Australian-bred was Zardozi – and she was conceived in England. Godolphin mare Chanderi was served by champion English sire Kingman to southern hemisphere time and sent to Australia in-foal where she gave birth to Zardozi in the spring of 2020. In the Brisbane Cup (3200m) at Eagle Farm on Saturday, the 11-horse field has only two locally-bred stayers including last year's defending champ Alegron. Kris Lees, the champion Newcastle trainer who prepares Changingoftheguard, conceded the northern hemisphere stayers were generally superior to locally-bred stayers. 'The European horses are natural stayers, it is in their DNA,'' Lees said. 'Their aerobic capacity seems to be a lot stronger and they have such stout staying pedigrees.'' This is one of the reasons Lees has no issue starting Changingoftheguard first-up in the Winter Cup. 'He wouldn't show up in a race under 2000m,'' Lees said. Changingoftheguard, formerly trained by Aidan O'Brien in Ireland, is a rising seven-year-old but has only had 12 starts, winning the Group 2 King Edward VII Stakes at Royal Ascot and finishing fifth in the 2022 English Derby behind Desert Crown. Williams sent Changingoftheguard down under last year and the stayer has had only one preparation for Lees, contesting three races last spring culminating with a good second in the Colin Stephen Quality. 'He ran a great race that day but we just felt he needed more time to fully acclimatise,'' Lees said. 'So, we gave him that opportunity, deliberately missed the autumn and he's coming up well. 'But the plan is to give him the one run then back off and put him away for spring.'' This is a blueprint owner Lloyd Williams has used often with his imported stayers he hopes could develop into Melbourne Cup contenders – one start in the second half of the season then concentrate on the spring carnival. Changingoftheguard back on the Roodee! Aidan O'Brien's Chester Vase and Royal @Ascot winner will make his return in the Ormonde at @ChesterRaces on Thursday... — At The Races (@AtTheRaces) May 9, 2023 • A Winter Cup at Rosehill seems a long way from the famous Flemington two-miler on the first Tuesday in November but it is not out of reach. Natski, who just happened to be an imported stayer, won the Winter Cup for the late Hall of Fame trainer Jack Denham then later that year ran a close second to Empire Rose in the Melbourne Cup. This was about the time when Williams started looking overseas for stayers. He had already won the Melbourne Cup twice that decade with Just A Dash (1981) and What A Nuisance (1985) and he wanted more. But it took Williams nearly 40 years to get it right before he won the Cup four times in eight years with imported stayers Green Moon (2012), Almandin (2016), Rekindling (2017) and Twilight Payment (2020). Williams has owned a record seven Melbourne Cup winners – he also won the race with Efficient (2006) – but believes the days of the European-bred horses dominating Australian staying races could be numbered. • 'We're all devastated': Super stallion Snitzel dies 'One of the things you will find from this point onwards is there won't be as many stayers from Europe coming here,'' Williams said. 'They are breeding more 'mile' horses over there now. It won't be easy to go over there and buy a stayer in years to come, you won't find as many.'' Williams has two Irish-bred stayers with Lees he hopes could make it to the Melbourne Cup – and both have the bloodlines of the great Galileo coursing through their veins. Galileo, the sire of Changingoftheguard, is also the grandsire of Adelaide River who is also due to have one run this winter in the Listed McKell Cup (2400m) at Rosehill in two weeks. Adelaide River, a Group 3 winner in Ireland, is a rising six-year-old who has only had 14 starts but has been gelded since he finished fourth in the Group 1 Caulfield Stakes last spring. Williams remembers seeing Galileo race and also standing at Coolmore Stud in Ireland and describes the stallion as 'extraordinary''. Galileo, who was superbly bred by the mighty Sadler's Wells out of the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner Urban Sea, won six of his eight starts including the 2001 English Derby. But as good as Galileo was on the racetrack, he has been even better at stud. He was leading sire in Britain a record 12 times and is the only stallion to sire over 100 individual Group 1 winners before he passed away in 2021. • 'This wasn't a decision I made lightly': Cummings on shock Hong Kong switch One of those was Niwot, winner of the 2009 Winter Cup who trained on to contest two Melbourne Cups finishing unplaced in both before his 2012 Sydney Cup win, defeating the Williams-owned Efficient. 'When Galileo died, I thought Aidan would struggle to win the (English) Derby but he has won the race two years in a row without a Galileo,'' Williams said. Well, almost. Lambourn, winner of the Derby last weekend, is by Australia, the 2014 Derby winner and himself a son of Galileo. O'Brien's Derby winner last year, Auguste Rodin, was by Japanese superhorse Deep Impact but was out of Galileo's daughter, champion filly Rhododendron. Galileo is the complete thoroughbred, an absolute champion on and off the racetrack, but he has sired one even better than himself – the incomparable Frankel. Undefeated in 14 starts including 10 at Group 1 level, Frankel earned the highest Timeform rating of all-time at 147 and is now the dominant stallion in Europe with two British Sires titles so far. 'Frankel is a freak horse but the Galileos were able to do anything, they could sprint and stay,'' Williams said. 'I'm not sure if the Frankels stay as quite well but he has already sired a number of classic winners so time will tell.'' Happy Birthday, FRANKEL!🎈 ðŸ'— — Juddmonte (@JuddmonteFarms) February 11, 2025 Frankel is also represented in the Winter Cup with the improving Peter Snowden -trained stayer Touristic, a last start winner of the Listed Lord Mayor's Cup. In fact, two more of Galileo's sire sons have Winter Cup runners – Churchill is the sire of Sir Chartwell and Highland Reel has Speycaster. In latest TAB Fixed Odds betting on the Winter Cup, the favoured runner of the Galileo breed is Touristic at $4, then Changingoftheguard $8, Speycaster $26 and Sir Chartwell $41. 'Changingoftheguard is a dogged sort of stayer, very one-paced but he has ability. We will see how he goes on Saturday,'' Williams said. 'I was talking to Kris the other day about Adelaide River and told him to give that horse one run this winter then bring him back for spring. I think he's a pretty decent horse, too.'' â– â– â– â– â– Emerging sprinter ready to take next step Trainer Kris Lees believes the emerging Tasoraay can negotiate the step up to city grade when the sprinter chases a hat-trick of wins in the Racing And Sports Handicap (1400m) at Rosehill Gardens on Saturday. Tasoraay is a lightly-raced three-year-old who broke his maiden at his fifth start at Newcastle last December then resumed with a decisive all-the-way win in a class 2 race at Scone on the opening day of the two-day Cup Carnival there last month. A city placegetter earlier in the season, Tasoraay impressive form surge has TAB Fixed Odds price assessors rating him a $5.50 chance and challenging $5 equal favourites Hell To Pay and Hopper at the top of betting. 'I thought Tasoraay won well first-up at Scone,'' Lees said. 'This is a jump in grade but he's come on really well since that run. He's a nice, little horse.'' The fav Tasoraay opens the day at @newcastleraces_ with a win for @Leesracing with Ben Osmond in the saddle! — SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) December 19, 2024 Lees believes Kind Words is due for a change of luck in the TAB Handicap (2000m). Kind Words has been racing consistently without winning this campaign but she's out to $10 in latest betting after drawing the extreme outside barrier. 'I don't think she's had a lot of luck lately,'' Lees said of Kind Words. 'She was narrowly beaten at Scone then last start at Rosehill that was the race when Dylan (Gibbons on eventual winner Half Yours) took off mid-race. 'We were right behind him but she just couldn't get into the race. I thought she still finished off well without threatening.'' Two wins in a row to Half Yours thanks to an innovative @djgibbons22 ride! ðŸ'� @mcevoymitchell | @aus_turf_club — SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) May 31, 2025 First Person just missed completing her hat-trick of wins when runner-up to Liberty State at Rosehill last start and she might be over the odds at $26 for the Asahi Super Dry Handicap (1100m). 'She's holding her form and although she probably wants it wetter coming back to 1100m will suit her.'' ...I think I won that quite well! First Person makes it two wins in a row with @TommyBerry21 handling the reins for @Leesracing! ðŸ'� @aus_turf_club — SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) May 21, 2025 Meanwhile, Lees provided an update on his Queensland Oaks winners You Wahng (2025) and Amokura (2023). You Wahng Amokura has run her last race after finishing unplaced behind stablemate Loch Eagle at Randwick last week. Matriarch Stakes at Flemington,'' Lees said. 'Amokura has pulled up OK after last week it's becoming hard to keep her sound so we feel it is in her best interests to retire her to stud.''

Friends of Niagara Turtle mourn loss of building's designer
Friends of Niagara Turtle mourn loss of building's designer

Yahoo

time11-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Friends of Niagara Turtle mourn loss of building's designer

Supporters of an effort to reawaken 'The Turtle' in downtown Niagara Falls are mourning the loss of one of the building's creators. Dennis Sun Rhodes, the Arapaho architect who worked with Tuscarora sculptor Wilmer 'Duffy' Wilson to help design the former Native American Center for Living Arts on Rainbow Boulevard, passed away on Thursday. Friends of the Niagara Turtle, the local non-profit that is working on preservation plans for the building, made attempts in recent years to contact Rhodes and make him aware of their effort. Rhodes did not weigh in publicly or endorse the idea of preserving the building in recent years. 'We are grateful for the design and joy this building gave both the Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities, as it sits just feet from Niagara Falls,' Friends of the Niagara Turtle board member Carl Skompinski wrote in a message posted to his group's Facebook page. 'We hope to honor his legacy, that of Duffy Wilson, and all those who worked tirelessly within its doors to bring native culture to our community and nations. Remember, this Indigenous Cultural Center pre-dates the Smithsonian's Museum of the American Indian and was well known throughout North America. May Mr. Sun Rhodes rest in peace.' Sun Rhodes was born on the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming, according to the website for Montana State University where he graduated with a degree in architecture. According to the university's website, Sun Rhodes went on to become a principal at architectural firms in St. Paul, Minnesota, and over the years developed a reputation for incorporating into his building designs symbolic shapes reflective of elements from Indigenous cultures. In addition to the Turtle building in the Falls, Sun Rhodes is credited for designing buildings for tribes across the country, including the Minneapolis American Indian Center, the Division of Indian Work building in Minneapolis and the Piya Wiconi Building at Oglala Lakota College on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. The turtle building operated as a center for Native American arts and culture from 1981 to 1995. The building is currently owned by the private firm Niagara Falls Redevelopment. NFR has indicated that it has not yet received any 'viable' plans for redeveloping the structure. Local efforts to develop a plan for preserving the building got a boost last month when the National Trust for Historic Preservation announced that it had been added to the group's 2025 list of America's 11 Most Endangered Historic Places. The group's designation described the Turtle as a 'powerful symbol of Indigenous heritage,' while noting, 'Unfortunately, the building has been vacant for almost 30 years, and the owner previously shared plans for demolition. A coalition has formed in hopes of 'reawakening' the Turtle once again.'

These are the most endangered historic places in all of New York State
These are the most endangered historic places in all of New York State

Time Out

time21-05-2025

  • Time Out

These are the most endangered historic places in all of New York State

If you've ever road-tripped through the Catskills or strolled near Niagara Falls, you might have passed two of New York's most endangered cultural gems, without realizing they're on the brink of vanishing. The National Trust for Historic Preservation just dropped its 2025 list of America's 11 Most Endangered Historic Places, and two New York State icons made the cut: The Wellington Hotel in Pine Hil l and The Turtle: Native American Center for the Living Arts in Niagara Falls. Let's start in the Catskills. Built in 1882, the Wellington is a hulking, wood-frame reminder of the golden age of mountain tourism—when resorts were grand, porches were wide and urbanites fled the heat for fresh air and blueberry pie. But today, it's sagging under the weight of time, with a failing foundation and a repair bill estimated at $7 million. The hamlet of Pine Hill, population 339, can't foot the bill alone. A grassroots group of 20 locals has stepped in with big plans to revive the space as a community hub with a café, grocery store and workforce housing, but they'll need serious funding to pull it off. Meanwhile, just steps from the roar of Niagara Falls, The Turtle—a striking, turtle-shaped cultural center built in 1981 by Arapaho architect Dennis Sun Rhodes—sits eerily silent. Once the largest Indigenous arts venue in the Eastern U.S., it's been closed since 1996 and is now unprotected, painted over and eyed for demolition. A coalition of more than 1,000 advocates, Indigenous and non-Indigenous alike, is fighting to bring it back to life as a celebration of Haudenosaunee heritage. Both projects underscore this year's theme: preservation isn't just about saving old buildings, but rather it's about making space for community, identity and economic resilience. In other words, it's not about nostalgia. It's about what happens next.

20 vintage photos show what life was like in America's small towns 100 years ago
20 vintage photos show what life was like in America's small towns 100 years ago

Business Insider

time20-05-2025

  • General
  • Business Insider

20 vintage photos show what life was like in America's small towns 100 years ago

Between the early 1900s and the 1940s, Oatman and nearby Gold Road were Arizona's biggest gold producers, and the town used to be a bustling center with over 10,000 the 2023 census, it had a population of just 102 the "lively ghost town" is defined by its streets of historic buildings, burros on the streets, and people wearing old-timey clothing and gunfighter costumes, as reported by Legends of America. The town was founded in 1881 and was named for O.H. Manning, a town of 1,500 is about 2 miles long and 2 miles wide, and its Main Street was paved in 1915, as reported by a community website. The town was established on land taken from the Cheyenne and Arapaho people. According to the Oklahoma Historical Society, at the end of the 19th century, a general merchandise store with a post office was established nearby. The name of the town honors a postal employee, Wayne W. Cordell. In 1905, a prospector found gold, and within a year, its population had reached 4,000, Travel Nevada about 125 people reside in the town, and residents often refer to their community as a "living ghost town," per Nevada's state tourism agency. Though the town enjoyed decades of prosperity for the resources provided by Grasshopper Creek, by the 1930s, few residents the following decade, the local school had to close down due to a lack of students, effectively turning the once-prosperous town into a ghost town, per Legends of now-abandoned town where gold was first discovered in the state is now part of a state park where dilapidated buildings are preserved. In 1925, Dayton, Tennessee, became famous for the Scopes Trial. In 1925, a Dayton high school science teacher, John T. Scopes, was tried and found guilty for teaching Charles Darwin's theory of evolution in what became known as the Scopes Trial. Fleischmanns, New York, was a vacation town for those looking to escape the New York City heat. Farmers discovered they could make money from people leaving the city, and hotels and guest houses popped up throughout the the town houses around 205 people, according to 2023 census estimates. Provincetown, Massachusetts, began as a fishing and whaling community. In 1914, the Provincetown Art Association and Museum was founded by a group of prominent local artists. They worked with local businesses to create an art collection and educate the public in the arts. The town is known for being the 1620 landing site of the Mayflower. Lumber operations are pictured in Crossett, Arkansas, in the 1920s. The town was named after Edward S. Crossett, a lumber entrepreneur. Stillwater, Minnesota, was incorporated in 1854 and also began as a lumbering town. The town "had all the ingredients for a lumbering town," as reported by the Washington County Historical Society. The town features rivers connecting the small community to the pine forests of northern Minnesota and Wisconsin, and still waters that allowed for the raft assembly industry to flourish 2011, Forbes named it as one of America's prettiest towns. Holy City, California, was established by a cult leader and white supremacist, William E. Riker, in 1919. Holy City was created not as a religious oasis, as the name would indicate, but instead as "a commune and tourist trap created in the 1920s by a white-supremacist huckster," the San Francisco Chronicle Chronicle also reported that Holy City was reduced to "a few derelict buildings" after facing fire, neglect, and a new freeway that cut off the compound from major roads. Mercury News reported in 2016 that the town was purchased after a decade on the market by Robert and Trish Duggan, billionaire Scientologists. Historians estimate that the ancestors of Taos Pueblo people built their living structures, as well as pottery and ceremonial buildings, as far back as 1000 AD, according to Wrangell, Alaska, pictured below in the early to mid-1900s, was discovered by the Tlingit tribe. The Native Alaskan populations remained isolated until the early 1800s, per Wrangell's website. Lt. Dionysius Zarembo, a Russian-American ship commander, landed on present-day Wrangell in 1833. It is the only city in Alaska to be ruled by four nations and under three flags — Tlingit, Russia, England, and the United States — according to the town's website. South Pass City, Wyoming, was founded as a gold mining town. It was later abandoned.

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