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Stephen Colbert on Trump’s Scotland trip: ‘A grift for the whole family’

2 days ago
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Late-night hosts recap Donald Trump using his taxpayer-funded time to open up a golf course in Scotland and an effort to rename the Kennedy Center after him.“Folks, I read once that if you’re a passenger in an auto accident, it helps if you’re just a little drunk,” said Stephen Colbert on Tuesday evening.“Because – and the science backs this up – a drunk passenger is a little loose.And if you’re a little loose, you’re less likely to get severely injured than if you tense up right before impact.”“Which brings me to our president,” the Late Show host continued.

“I think at this point, it would help if we were all just a little drunk.Because maybe then it wouldn’t be so painful when he drives the world into a telephone pole.“We all know that he’s crazy,” he added, “but some of the crazy stuff is just to distract us from the crazier stuff.And maybe we should stop trying to stop every crazy, because stopping some of crazy makes the crazy stuff seem less crazy than he could possibly craze.And let’s face it – if you think we’re going to stop all the crazy, you cray-cray.

”The latest “case of cuckoo” came courtesy of a Republican lawmaker who introduced a bill to rename the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to the Donald J Trump Center for the Performing Arts.The bill’s sponsor claimed that “Trump is a patron of the arts and a staple of the pop-culture landscape”.“I’m sorry, but it’s true: Trump is a staple of pop culture.Just last week, he was great on South Park,” Colbert quipped, referring to the Comedy Central animated program whose latest season premiere showed a naked Trump in bed with Satan.The center was originally named for Kennedy just months after his assassination, as a living memorial for the slain president.

“You know what they say about those who forget the past: they name stuff after Donald Trump,” Colbert joked.In other presidential news, Trump spent the past few days in Scotland, “to negotiate trade golf over his golf tariffs on European golf, because he went there to play golf,” Colbert explained.“He spent your tax dollars to open his new course in Aberdeen”, designed by his middle son, Eric – an occasion, as Colbert put it, that celebrated “a grift for the whole family”.On Late Night, Seth Meyers recapped a recent JD Vance event in Ohio, where the vice-president was asked about the Jeffrey Epstein files still dogging Trump.Vance said Trump has been “incredibly transparent about that stuff”.

“And I agree – we can absolutely see right through him,” said Meyers.On Monday, Trump said that the baseline tariff rate for the world would be between 15 and 20%, and added: “You can’t sit down and make 200 deals.”“I mean, come on, where would he find the time?” Meyers joked.In a post over the weekend on Truth Social, Trump suggested that NBC – Late Night’s network – should lose its broadcasting license.“Oh, come on, the show wasn’t that bad,” said Meyers next to an old still from Trump’s NBC reality program The Apprentice.

And during a media appearance over the weekend, Trump was asked whether he rushed to finish a trade deal with the European Union to “knock the Jeffrey Epstein story out”.“Oh yeah, I’m sure all the conspiracy theorists in Maga will stop talking about Epstein now that there’s a new trade deal,” Meyers joked.“‘So you think Trump was on the list or what?’ ‘Who cares! We can get cheaper sardines from Portugal!’”It’s starting to seem like being president of the United States is Trump’s side hustle pic.twitter.com/tIotGQgsc2“Trump is in Scotland right now, seeing as his favorite island destination has been shut down,” said Daily Show guest host Desi Lydic next to a photo of Trump with Epstein.

“When a president is overseas, it’s important for them to project strength and dignity, although an uninvited insect made that a little harder for President Trump,” Lydic said before a clip of Trump freaking out about an apparent bug in his shirt.“Feels like Trump’s accidental dance moves are way more impressive than his intentional ones.”“I do understand why he was so frantic: that mosquito was also asking Trump about Jeffrey Epstein,” Lydic quipped.“Now, Trump was not just wasting time playing golf,” she continued.“He was also wasting time profiting off golf,” as he opened his latest golf course in Aberdeen.

Lydic was not impressed.“Just a reminder, this man is still the president of the United States,” she said.“There’s a lot going on in the world, and he’s at a ribbon-cutting ceremony to promote his golf course? Is this his side hustle, or is America his side hustle?”“We’re just used to this now,” she added, “but imagine if when Obama was still in office, he kept flying on Air Force One to open up Pizza Hut/Taco Bell franchises.”
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Staff fear to speak up at NHS hospital trust under police investigation, report says

Staff at a hospital trust where police are investigating at least 90 deaths say they face reprisals and ridicule from bosses if they raise concerns, according to a damning report.Asked to review University Hospitals Sussex, the report’s authors said they “repeatedly heard concerning examples of staff, often at a senior level, being ignored, dismissed and sometimes ridiculed when speaking up”.The report by Niche Health and Social Care Consulting said this fear of reprisals from whistleblowing could be harming patient safety. It also highlighted complaints of misogyny and failures to deal with “unwanted romantic advances”.The review team noted a number of challenges facing the trust, including an investigation by Sussex police into possible corporate and individual manslaughter charges over allegations of medical negligence and cover-up in the general surgery and neurosurgery departments

1 day ago
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World’s ‘oldest baby’ born from embryo frozen in 1994

The world’s “oldest baby” has been born in the US from an embryo that was frozen in 1994, it has been reported.Thaddeus Daniel Pierce was born on 26 July in Ohio to Lindsey and Tim Pierce, using an “adopted” embryo from Linda Archerd, 62, from more than 30 years ago.In the early 1990s, Archerd and her then husband decided to try in vitro fertilisation (IVF) after struggling to become pregnant. In 1994 four embryos resulted: one was transferred to Archerd and resulted in the birth of a daughter, who is now 30 and mother to a 10-year-old. The other embryos were cryopreserved and stored

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Mother’s instinct not addressed, report on death of boy sent home from Rotherham A&E says

A report into the death of a five-year-old Rotherham boy sent home from A&E has called for national guidance to take into account parents’ intuition that “something feels very wrong” about their child.Yusuf Mahmud Nazir died of pneumonia and sepsis at Sheffield children’s hospital on 23 November 2022, almost a week after his parents first raised concerns that he was unwell.He was seen by numerous clinicians who failed to listen to the concerns of his mother, Soniya Ahmed, that something was seriously wrong with Yusuf, instead relying solely on data that suggested he was not seriously ill.The independent patient safety investigation (IPSI) report, commissioned by NHS England in response to significant concerns raised by Yusuf’s family, recommended that caregivers’ concerns be taken more seriously when assessing children.The report asked healthcare organisations to consider treating parental intuition as a “legitimate and vital form of evidence” and asked: “What becomes possible when the instinct of a mother is given the same attention as a monitor reading?”The report, written by Dr Peter Carter, an independent healthcare consultant and former chief executive and general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, stated: “The system is not designed to capture ‘something feels very wrong’ as an input, and thus a gap opens between family and clinicians

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First NHS AI-run physio clinic in England halves back-pain waiting list

The first NHS AI-run physiotherapy clinic has halved the waiting list for back pain and musculoskeletal services, according to the NHS trust where the pilot has taken place.More than 2,500 patients living in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough were able to access Flok Health, a physiotherapy platform run by AI, over a 12-week period starting in February.The platform, which was created using video footage of a human physiotherapist, provides same-day automated video appointments with a digital physiotherapist via an app that responds to information given by a patient in real time.When the clinic was first launched in Cambridgeshire, waiting times for elective community musculoskeletal (MSK) services in the region were about 18 weeks.The waiting times for all MSK conditions decreased by 44% over the course of the 12-week period due to the use of Flok combined with other initiatives such as community assessment days, according to Cambridgeshire Community Services NHS trust (CCS), which deployed the services in those areas of England

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The care sector needs migrant workers. Labour’s visa crackdown is a cynical move | Letter

You are right to highlight, in your editorial, the folly of the government’s decision to make it harder for migrant workers to find work as carers in the UK (The Guardian view on Labour’s visa crackdown in social care: another problem for an overstretched system, 22 July).It’s a cynical political move aimed at spiking Reform UK’s guns on immigration, rather than alleviating pressure on the much-maligned care sector. Migrant workers are indispensable in filling roles that have been undervalued, underpaid and unwanted for too long.With thousands more care professionals needed to look after our ageing population, the government needs a joined-up approach if the crisis-ridden sector is to be transformed.While the government’s fair pay agreement is the first step in turning care around, ministers must think again on their approach to foreign help – and, closer to home, announce the funding to make the fair pay agreement a reality

2 days ago
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Green burials – the biodegradable alternative | Letter

For those who find the idea of burning their deceased friend’s body distasteful (‘The delivery man arrived with the ashes in a gift bag’ – why are so many people opting out of traditional funerals?, 23 July), an alternative to direct cremation is a green burial, which costs more but not excessively so. Here, the grave is not permanent, and everything that goes in it has to be biodegradable – this rules out embalming. Coffins must be made of cardboard or untreated wood – woven willow is becoming very popular. No permanent memorial is allowed, but usually a wooden plaque can be added, which will last for several years if oiled. Natural wildflowers can often be planted, but vases cannot be used

2 days ago
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Rosorange: is the latest wine trend here to stay? | Hannah Crosbie on drinks

1 day ago
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Rachel Roddy’s recipe for Sardinian crispbread lasagne | A kitchen in Rome

2 days ago
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The rapid rise of Luckin coffee: is this the end of the Starbucks supremacy?

2 days ago
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How to transform leftover baked potato into a summery Italian feast | Waste not

3 days ago
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Melon salad and Georgian-style grilled vegetables: Alice Zaslavsky’s recipes for barbecue-friendly sides

3 days ago
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Air fryer, slushie maker, food processor, two blenders … is my Ninja kitchen appliance habit out of control?

3 days ago