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Can Trump explain away Epstein scandal to MAGA supporters
Can Trump explain away Epstein scandal to MAGA supporters

RTÉ News​

time10-08-2025

  • Politics
  • RTÉ News​

Can Trump explain away Epstein scandal to MAGA supporters

Donald Trump has called the Epstein scandal 'bullshit', he called believers 'idiots' and 'selfish people" and urged supporters to forget about his former friend, but unlike many other scandals involving the US president, it just won't go away. Mr Trump's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein scandal has been the administration's biggest political problem to date. The conspiracy theory around the disgraced financier and sexual predator, that the US President helped fuel, seemingly has turned around to bite him. Many loyal Trump followers believe Epstein kept a list of hugely powerful people who had engaged in sex with women and underage girls that he trafficked. The conspiracy suggests Epstein didn't take his own life but rather that these powerful people on the list had him killed before he could out them. Believers have been calling for the release of this list for years, and when US Attorney General Pam Bondi said in February that the list was sitting on her desk, conspiracists broke into a fever. But when Trump's Department of Justice announced last month that the list didn't exist, many lost faith. There has been fierce criticism of Donald Trump, from some of his most fervent supporters for the first time, from QAnon influencers to conservative podcast hosts. QAnon is a widely followed conspiracy theory purporting that a mysterious government insider called Q is leaking secrets to help Mr Trump battle the deep state and a cabal of powerful paedophiles including the likes of Hillary Clinton. But the narrative that all the conspiracists have turned against their supposed saviour, isn't quite as clear cut as it has been made out. Ciarán O'Connor, who researches conspiracy theories for think tank ISD Global said the belief in conspiracy theories is very hard to break. 'Conspiracy theories are elastic' "Conspiracy theories are elastic, they're self-sealing and they're quite often impossible to disprove," he said. "Especially to a base that is radicalised and so supportive and has been fed a diet of conspiracy fantasy plots over time by someone like President Trump". But, Will Sommer, journalist with The Bullwark and author of 'Trust the Plan: The Rise of QAnon and the Conspiracy That Unhinged America' says this feels different. He says: "All of these other Trump scandals like, taking this plane from Qatar, things like that, they've sort of immunised the audience to not care about these ethical conflicts, but the difference being that with Epstein. "I mean they, the right-wing media figures, people like Cash Patel, who's now in the administration. "They all said like this is really, really, important. You should care a lot about this and then suddenly, Trump says: 'Shut up. Stop asking about it. You're you're an idiot if you believe this.' "And so there has been this whiplash." Mr O'Connor also sees the beginnings of a significant fracture. "President Trump created a lot of MAGA content creators, and the promise to find out the truth about Epstein as their raison d'être," he says. "So Epstein and allegations around him and trying to prove them kind of became a purity test for the MAGA base." Some blips in conspiracies like the promise to arrest Hillary Clinton, that didn't happen can be explained away as part of a longer-term plan, but the Epstein list is so central to the whole conspiracy world, that it can't be just batted away. "Donald Trump has tried distraction in recent weeks, by bringing up the Russia Hoax and suggesting that Obama could be arrested by posting a fake AI video of the former president being hauled off in cuffs from the Oval Office, but people have seen through the tactic and become even more enraged," says Mr O'Connor. Much ire has been directed towards Kash Patel, director of the FBI and Dan Bongino, deputy director of the FBI, both of whom made their name as conspiracy theory peddlers whose central theme was the need to expose the Epstein list. But now that they're in government they're towing the same line as previous administrations whom they labelled as the deep state that Donald Trump is supposedly battling. Loyal followers like podcaster Andrew Shulz are turning against Mr Trump. On his hugely successful show 'Flagrant' this week he said: "He put Bongino and Kash in there, which might be the stupidest thing in the history of the world. "Why would you put the two guys that have non-stop pounded the pavement talking about how we're going to expose this Epstein thing, and the second they get in there like: 'You better shut the f*ck up." 'A line in the sand' Even podcasting powerhouse Joe Rogan has called the Epstein issue 'a line in the sand'. It seems the best media manipulator in all of politics fundamentally misreading the media landscape before him. Mr Sommer says it's very unusual for Donald Trump to be so out of step with his base for even 24 hours, and now we've seen a whole month of it. We know from reporting in the Wall Street Journal that Pam Bondi told the president that he's mentioned in the Epstein files, not necessarily in a criminal way, but it certainly could be embarrassing for him. "It seems he's acting in a way that that seems so unlike him but that he's sort of protecting something larger or avoiding a bigger pain," says Sommer. Yet such is the elasticity and strength of belief in the conspiracy that Mr O'Connor doesn't rule it out. "MAGA influencers may well possibly find ways to find a comfortable through line between Trump's rejections that there is anything important in the Epstein client list, to the kind of drip, drip of further calls for investigations where Ghislaine Maxwell may come into it. "Time will tell on that," he adds. One of the explanations that is surfacing among right wing commentators and conspiracy theorists is that maybe Ghislaine Maxwell is innocent, and maybe she could come clean, exonerate Mr Trump and name the real culprits. But Mr Sommer thinks this would be a difficult sell to the MAGA crowd, partly because it has happened so quickly. With other scandals like 6 January, there was time to build a counter narrative and suggest that maybe the rioters were innocent, but this has been so abrupt, there's been no time to rehabilitate Ghislaine Maxwell for example "To convince people that it's OK to pardon this sex offender, like a sex trafficker," he says. "It's not easy. It's the ultimate test of Trump's idea that that he could shoot someone in the middle of the street and get away with it." And ultimately it will be Trump rather than any right-wing influencers that will have to do the convincing. "Unlike anyone else in his administration or the wider MAGA media world, no one can really speak to the MAGA base quite like Trump," say Mr O'Connor. Nobody expects hardcore MAGA supporters to suddenly vote for democrats, but they could become disillusioned and not vote, and independent voters could be swayed. The Epstein files are likely to haunt the US President right up to next year's midterm elections and possibly beyond.

From Dusty Grounds to IPL Glory: How Madhya Pradesh Became Heartland Of Indian Cricket In 2025
From Dusty Grounds to IPL Glory: How Madhya Pradesh Became Heartland Of Indian Cricket In 2025

NDTV

time04-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • NDTV

From Dusty Grounds to IPL Glory: How Madhya Pradesh Became Heartland Of Indian Cricket In 2025

As the final over of IPL 2025 thundered through packed stadiums and into the hearts of millions, a quiet revolution had already cemented its place in cricketing history-not in Mumbai or Delhi, but in the bylanes of Indore, the gullies of Bhopal, and the cricketing outposts of Ratlam, Sagar and Seoni. For a state long known more for its hockey sticks and kho-kho dreams, Madhya Pradesh's emergence as a powerhouse in the 18th edition of the Indian Premier League was no less than a sporting renaissance. This wasn't just a season-it was a milestone, a movement, and a moment of reckoning for the state that once stood on the periphery of Indian cricket. Eleven Stars, One State, Infinite Dreams For the first time, every team in IPL 2025 barring Mumbai Indians and Chennai Super Kings featured at least one player from Madhya Pradesh. This wasn't a statistical quirk-it was a resounding statement. Rajat Patidar, the stoic stroke-maker from Indore, led Royal Challengers Bangalore to their maiden IPL title. Shashank Singh, the silent finisher from Bhopal, brought Punjab Kings to the final with match-winning flair. Venkatesh Iyer, now the vice-captain of Kolkata Knight Riders, and the state's highest-earning cricketer this season, anchored innings and inspired teammates. And Avesh Khan, once a boy at Amay Khurasia's trial camps, now bowling thunderbolts at 140+ km/h, became India's pace ace. Add to this the quiet consistency of Ashutosh Sharma, the six-storm that is Aniket Verma, and the raw swing of Arshad Khan, and you have a side that could easily front an IPL franchise of its own. The Rise of Rajat: From Holkar to Hero If this IPL had a protagonist, it was Rajat Patidar. Handed the captaincy of RCB, he didn't just fill Virat Kohli 's shoes-he reshaped them. His leadership was calm, tactical, and selfless. With a strike rate of 143.77, he scored 312 runs in 15 matches, including two half-centuries. But beyond the numbers was his elegance-a flick of the wrists, a cover drive that silenced stadiums and awakened tea stalls in Indore, where fans now unofficially refer to their hangouts as "Rajat Chowks." "Even as a 7-year-old, Rajat never sat idle at the nets," recalls his first coach Ram Atre. "He wasn't just playing the game; he was studying it, owning it." His coach Ram Atre vividly remembers the day-a shy seven-year-old boy walked into the camp in the year 2000. "I saw something in him, a spark. Even at that age, I knew I had to train him," he recalls. Rajat was never the loudest voice on the field, but his cricketing instincts and leadership qualities made all the difference. This season, it was his calm captaincy, sharp decision-making, and sheer consistency that many credit for RCB's championship run. Even today, whenever Rajat is in Indore, he makes it a point to visit his home club. He not only trains young kids but also corrects their mistakes with the same patience and dedication that shaped his own journey. Coach Atre says Rajat's love for cricket was evident from the beginning. "He did everything-wicketkeeping, batting, bowling-you name it. There was never a moment when he was on the ground and just sitting idle." His family, too, was always supportive yet simple. In those early days, his parents used to quietly watch from a distance. "Even today, despite all the success, they prefer to stay away from the glamour," says Atre. The Bhopal Blaze: Shashank Singh's Silent Roar While Patidar shone under the arc lights, Shashank Singh carved his name in whispers and match-winners. His unbeaten 61 off 30 deliveries in the final was poetry in motion, the kind that made waves across Bhopal's lakes. Once a boy playing near the railway tracks, he's now Punjab's go-to man under pressure. He didn't speak much this season, but his bat had stories to tell-and sixes to send beyond boundaries. From the Fringe to Firepower: Aniket Verma and Ashutosh Sharma You wouldn't find Aniket Verma in first-class records-until he lit up this IPL with an over of six sixes. The boy born in Jhanshi but played in Bhopal's modest lanes became the people's batter. Ashutosh Sharma, born in Ratlam and raised with the sound of plastic balls hitting metal gates, scripted a fairytale. After being dropped from the MP Ranji team in 2020, he didn't quit-he joined the Railways, trained harder, and bounced back. He smashed India's fastest T20 fifty (11 balls) in the 2023 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, eclipsing even Yuvraj Singh. In IPL 2025, he returned that trust with a 66 not out against LSG, lifting Delhi Capitals single-handedly. Ashutosh's success is deeply rooted in the unwavering support of his family. His father, Ram Babu Sharma, a retired government employee, recalls how Ashutosh was obsessed with cricket as a child-so much so that he often had to scold him just to keep things balanced. His mother, Hemlata Sharma, beams with pride whenever she talks about her son. She never misses a single match and can recite every run he has scored by heart. "Now, I just want to see him play for the Indian team and also get married soon," she laughs, before adding, "but Ashutosh says he isn't ready for marriage yet." Ashutosh's elder brother Anil Sharma shares that even today, if something bothers him, Ashutosh doesn't hesitate to call at 2 a.m. to talk it through. "No matter what the situation is, the first person Ashu turns to is me," he says with quiet pride. A Salon of Dreams: The Kuldeep Sen Chronicle In Rewa, Kuldeep Sen's father quietly ran his salon as the IPL final played. His son didn't get a game this season, but the pride in his voice remained unwavering: "He was part of a team that reached the final. That's enough for us." The family had prepared sweets, called neighbors. The team lost. But the celebration was in the journey-not just the destination. Among the stars of IPL 2025, Avesh Khan stood tall, bowling thunder at 140+ km/h for Lucknow Super Giants. But his story, like many others from Madhya Pradesh, began far from the glamour-on the narrow lanes of Tulsi Nagar in Indore. His coach, Kapil Yadav, remembers the very first day: "He was just 11 when he came to me. Even then, there was raw pace in him-a hunger you could feel in the air when he bowled." Every morning, Avesh would ride his bicycle 15 kilometers to reach the club, never once complaining. After school, he'd be on the ground by 1 p.m., and wouldn't leave until nightfall. All he did-day after day-was bowl. His personal goal? Knock down 20 stumps every single day. "That repetition, that madness-it made him what he is today," says Coach Yadav. But the road wasn't smooth. Avesh's family struggled financially. His father ran a small paan shop, which was demolished during a road widening project, just when Avesh's cricket journey had begun. "Even then," Kapil recalls, "his family never let him feel small. They stood behind him like a wall." Today, he's not just a name on the team sheet-he's a symbol of grit. As more Indore-based cricketers break into the IPL, Coach Kapil credits the rise to the structural expansion of the Indore Division. "We used to have just 10 A-grade clubs-now we have over 20. Kids are coming in from smaller towns nearby to train here. That's the backbone of our success." Venkatesh, Arshad, Kartikeya - The Other Titans - Venkatesh Iyer, now vice-captain at KKR, also moonlights as a singer. His balance of brain and brawn made him Kolkata's talisman. Arshad Khan, from Seoni, redefined raw pace. His toe-crushing yorkers and lethal inswing made him GT's secret weapon. Kumar Kartikeya (RR), Madhav Tiwari (Mauganj), and Kulwant Khejroliya (GT) rounded off a team that never wore one jersey-but bled one ambition. Building a Cricketing Culture: MPCA's Mission Much of this talent surge finds its roots in the systemic groundwork laid by MPCA. In 2011, the association began a structured age-group coaching plan at the Holkar Academy. By 2024, they launched the Madhya Pradesh Premier League (MPL)-a breeding ground for future stars. And the impact is visible: from 4 Test cricketers historically, MP now boasts 11 IPL players in a single season, putting it shoulder to shoulder with Uttar Pradesh, and just behind Delhi, Mumbai, Karnataka, and Punjab. The Push for a Home Franchise With this momentum, the demand for an Madhya Pradesh-based IPL franchise is growing. "Our players are ready, infrastructure is strong. An IPL team will only push the dream further," says State Sports Minister Vishvas Sarang. Even women's cricket is seeing rapid growth, with a 3-team women's T20 league launched recently. MPL is now expanding into Chambal, and more districts await inclusion. Not Just Talent, but Systemic Strength Much of MP's success is not accidental. It's the outcome of years of investment, discipline, and vision. Back in 2011, the Madhya Pradesh Cricket Association (MPCA) began a structured coaching programme targeting age groups 12 to 15 at their Holkar Stadium Academy. This initiative gave India players like Avesh Khan, Rahul Batham, and Ashutosh Sharma. In 2024, the MPCA launched the Madhya Pradesh Premier League (MPL)-a domestic T20 league that became the direct pathway for players like Aniket Verma and Madhav Tiwari into the IPL. Speaking to NDTV, MPCA President Abhilash Khandekar credited not just the players but the coaches too. "Much of this transformation began with the arrival of Chandrakant Pandit. He instilled discipline and professionalism into the system. Success like this doesn't come overnight-there has been a long, committed struggle behind it," he said. Today, MPCA's sub-academies in Gwalior, Bhopal, Sagar, Jabalpur, Hoshangabad, and Rewa continue to produce talent. Even remote tribal regions like Mandla, Seoni, and Chhatarpur are now part of the cricketing map. The state now boasts of robust grassroots infrastructure and equal opportunities for players from both cities and smaller towns. The system ensures no dream goes unseen, no talent goes untested. Beyond the Boundary IPL 2025 wasn't just about boundaries and bouncers. It was about belongings. It was about a state rediscovering its identity-not through speeches or slogans, but through scorecards. From Holkar Stadium to Eden Gardens, from Ratlam's dusty lanes to Bengaluru's victory podium, Madhya Pradesh has scripted a new tale-a story where cricket is not a game, but a metaphor for grit, growth, and glory. In the rear-view mirror of this season, the real victory lies not just in the trophy, but in how far Madhya Pradesh has come, and how much farther it now dares to go. As the final over of IPL 2025 drew to a close and Rajat Patidar lifted the trophy, it wasn't just Bengaluru that celebrated. Indore did. Bhopal did. Ratlam did. And so did every dusty pitch and plastic-ball gully where a child still dares to dream. Because now, when MP plays, the whole country watches.

Acronis Report Reveals 197% Rise in Email Cyberattacks - TECHx Media Acronis Report Reveals 197% Rise in Email Cyberattacks
Acronis Report Reveals 197% Rise in Email Cyberattacks - TECHx Media Acronis Report Reveals 197% Rise in Email Cyberattacks

TECHx

time14-02-2025

  • Business
  • TECHx

Acronis Report Reveals 197% Rise in Email Cyberattacks - TECHx Media Acronis Report Reveals 197% Rise in Email Cyberattacks

Acronis, a global cybersecurity and data protection firm, has released its biannual 'Acronis Cyberthreats Report, H2 2024: The Rise of AI-Driven Threats,' revealing alarming trends in cyberattacks. The report indicates a 197% increase in email cyberattacks in the second half of 2024 compared to the same period in 2023, with a 21% rise in attacks per organization. From July to December 2024, nearly half (50%) of users were targeted by email-based attacks, with spam making up 31.4% of all emails. Shockingly, 1.4% of these emails contained malware or phishing links. Managed service providers (MSPs) have become prime targets, with email phishing campaigns impacting 33% of MSPs in H2 2024. Phishing continues to be the primary attack vector, followed by vulnerabilities in Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) and other remote access tools. This trend highlights cybercriminals exploiting common MSP practices to breach networks and deploy malicious payloads. A troubling trend noted in the report is the rise of advanced persistent threat (APT)-linked ransomware groups targeting MSPs. These groups employ sophisticated espionage tactics, including stolen credentials, social engineering, and supply chain attacks, to infiltrate MSP networks and deploy ransomware on client systems. This shift signals that MSPs have evolved from opportunistic targets to strategic entry points for high-stakes cyberattacks. In December 2024, the UAE was notably among the most targeted countries for malware attacks. The country also saw the highest percentage of blocked malicious URLs (16.2%), followed by Brazil (13.2%) and Singapore (12.0%). Gerald Beuchelt, CISO at Acronis, commented on the report: 'This biannual release from the Acronis Threat Research Unit highlights the alarming rise of AI-generated attacks and the sophistication of ransomware campaigns. By offering actionable insights, this report helps organizations, MSPs, and the cybersecurity industry strengthen their defenses against emerging threats.' The report also points to the security risks associated with the growing adoption of remote monitoring and management (RMM) tools. While RMM tools enhance organizational efficiency, their widespread use has introduced blind spots that attackers can exploit. The lack of proper controls can transform RMM tools into entry points for ransomware, leading to severe damage. In addition to an analysis of emerging threats in H2 2024, the report offers a comprehensive overview of the top vulnerabilities exploited in 2024 and provides predictions for 2025. It concludes with actionable recommendations for organizations and MSPs to fortify their defenses against these evolving cyber risks.

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