Media Search:



"It’s not a great job to be in": Livingston boss David Martindale on the pressures of management after Jack Ross is sacked – Edinburgh News

The Livi boss, who believes the implementation of some kind of manager-changing window needs to be explored, said: "Who would actually want to be a manager? What's the life cycle of a manager? Maybe 18 months, if that, if you average it out.

"It's a very harsh and cynical environment and I don't think people understand how stressful it can be. It has a massive impact on my wife and my daughter because they read social media.

"Scotland is a very passionate and emotional nation when it comes to football but has social media heightened it? I think it has.

"In the past, if you didn't have a great game and got booed at the end, that's probably all you would hear until the next game. But now it's constant throughout the week, with media and social media constantly on you 24/7.

"You didn't know what the rest of the world was talking about before because you'd be confined to your club and your own life, but now it's constant.

"Unless you're earning hundreds of thousands of pounds a year, where that stick can wash off you a little bit, it's not a great job to be in and it's not a great environment to be in at times with the social media backlash it involves.

"At times, you feel isolated as a manager when you go through a tough run of form. It's testament to my board that they've stuck by me when I've gone through a tough run over the last seven years. There's a lot to be said for continuity.

"At the bigger clubs, I think now with the social media and how much hype there is, the dynamics are changing.

"It used to be that guys would go down the pub and discuss whether the manager or the players had a good game, but now it's all over social media, and before you know it, there's 1,000 tweets and then, come the next game, everybody turns up waiting on a negative thing to happen.

"I don't think it's a great job, job security-wise and mentally."

Reflecting on Ross's sacking, Martindale said: "I've got a lot of sympathy for Jack because I think he's done a fantastic job at Hibs.

"We've been in opposite dugouts for probably six of the last eight seasons if I go back to his time at Dumbarton, Alloa and St Mirren. I've always found him very approachable and very knowledgeable and very humble in victory or defeat.

"I did not think Jack would be out of a job this morning.

"Hibs are a huge club. Are they underperforming in the league? Yes, slightly. But was there an opportunity for Jack to turn it round? I think there was. He could have won the cup final and become a legend and that cup form could have kicked into the league form.

"It's so cutthroat now. As a manager, all you ask is to be given a bit of time because it can't always be plain sailing."

Message from the editor

Continued here:
"It's not a great job to be in": Livingston boss David Martindale on the pressures of management after Jack Ross is sacked - Edinburgh News

CDC: Most of 43 omicron cases detected in first days of December considered mild | TheHill – The Hill

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) detected 43 COVID-19 cases attributed to the omicron variant,nearly all of which were considered mild and discovered in the first week of December.

At least 22 states documented at least one COVID-19 case associated with the new variant of concern during the first eight days of December, according to data released by the CDC on Friday. Out of the 43 cases, the agency confirmed one hospitalization, which lasted two days, and zero deaths.

While the U.S. confirmed its first case of omicron last week in a California resident, the CDC said at least one patient who traveled internationally developed symptoms on Nov. 15. The timeline means the omicron strain was likely in the U.S. longer than initially thought, as the California patient first experienced symptoms on Nov. 25.

South Africa first reported the omicron strain to the World Health Organization on Nov. 24 two days before the international organization designated it as a variant of concern.

CDC Director Rochelle WalenskyRochelle WalenskyOvernight Health Care Presented by AstraZeneca and Friends of Cancer Research Court leaves Texas abortion ban, allows suits CDC: Most of 43 omicron cases detected in first days of December considered mild Overnight Health Care Boosters expanded to 16- and 17-year-olds MORE detailed some of the data in an interview with The Associated Press on Thursday, including that most of the 43 cases so far were considered mild and that most of the patientshad been vaccinated.

Almost 80 percent ofthe patients with an omicron strain had a full primary series of a COVID-19 vaccine. Fourteen had received an additional or booster dose, including five who got that extra dose less than 14 days after symptoms emerged.

One-third of the patients had traveled internationally within 14 days of developing symptoms or testing positive. Most of the infected individuals ranged from 18 to 39 years old, although the strain also infected four children and four adults aged 65 and older.

Only three ofthe patients were asymptomatic, with the most common symptoms reported being cough, fatigue, congestion and runny nose. Six patients had previously contracted COVID-19.

But the CDC researchers warned that even if most infections are mild, a highly transmissible variant could result in enough cases to overwhelm health systems.

The delta variant is still considered the most prevalent strain in the country by far, estimated to make up 99.9 percent of cases across the U.S. last week.

In response to the omicron variants emergence, the U.S. initiated a travel banfor eight African countries near South Africa and Botswana,which were the first countriestoreport the strain. The CDC also started a voluntary airport-based genomic surveillance program in four airports.

The agency updated its guidance to recommend booster doses for all adults in the days after the omicron variant was reported. On Thursday, the CDC expanded booster access to 16- and 17-year-olds.

In its report, the CDC called for the U.S. to use prevention strategies ranging from vaccinations, masking, improved ventilation, testing, quarantine and isolation to curb the spread of the virus, including cases involving the omicron strain.

Here is the original post:
CDC: Most of 43 omicron cases detected in first days of December considered mild | TheHill - The Hill

Passi City scholars allege they are required to welcome Bongbong-Sara caravan – Rappler

ILOILO CITY, Philippines Scholars of the Passi City government are being required to attend a caravan in support of the Bongbong Marcos-Sara Duterte tandem on Saturday, December 11, according to screenshots leaked to the internet Thursday evening, December 9.

These screenshots were from the Passi City Scholars Facebook group, posted by a certain Cio Lgu Passi, which appears to be an older account of the City Information Office.

The post, in the Kinaray-a language spoken in some parts of Panay island, required college and senior high school-level scholars to wear red shirts and position themselves in several areas where the caravans would pass by.

Payroll numbers containing their stipends as well as clearances for their renewal would be released to them after the program, said the post that also warned them against sharing the announcement.

It told scholars to send representatives if their schedules were in conflict with the event.

Scholars were also told to simply respect the Passi City Mayor Stephen Palmares and Vice Mayor Jesry Palmares, and not to make comments on social media, saying that they are the ones who decide whether or not to continue the scholarship program.

You already know how the Mayor and the Vice Mayor worked hard for our progress. Scholars, they need your support and not your bad comments. In our part at the CIO, we cannot control your individual attitudes. But for us, you should think about the words you let out, the account said in its post.

Passi City Mayor Stephen Palmares, who is also Lakas-CMDs chairperson in Iloilo province, clarified to Rappler that the attendance to the said caravan was purely voluntary.

We would like to clarify that here in Passi City, that attending the [December 11 caravan] is voluntary for the scholars, and we have also invited all organizations in the city, informing them as to those who support Bongbong Marcos and Sara [Duterte], to come tomorrow at the welcome arch and wear red, said Palmares.

Palmares also denied that non-attendance to the said event will affect scholars standing with the scholarship program.

He added that the screenshots were not true, despite Rapplers verification that the Cio Lgu Passi account has been used by the city government for quite some time now.

Their scholarships will be released on January or February to the scholars. There is no point to that argument. Our scholarship program has been there since before I became mayor. I have asked investigation of the circulating [screenshots], and since it is in social media, anybody can create an account. They can get information from our official Facebook pages, he said.

The mayor also took to his personal Facebook account to release a statement, reiterating that the caravan was voluntary.

I would like to clarify that city scholars are NOT COMPELLED/ REQUIRED TO ATTEND the Caravan or to wear red t-shirts. Instead, we are only encouraging the scholars (who are also supporters of BBM-Sara) to join the caravan. In fact, not only the scholars are encouraged but also other sectors in our community. Furthermore, any political parties who would like to hold a caravan in our city are welcome for I personally believe that no matter what our political affiliations are, we are all equal, the mayor said in his post.

Two of the scholars, Dessa* and Jane* confirmed to Rappler that the screenshots were indeed true, and expressed their disappointment with the said requirement.

The two also confirmed that they were told to provide valid reasons as to why they would not attend before their clearances and their payroll numbers would be released.

Both of them said the same thing: while the post did not explicitly state the words mandatory or required, the tenor of the post made them feel compelled to obey or risk their education.

Dessa* expressed her shock, saying that they felt oppressed because their freedom to support and choose the countrys next leaders was being taken.

I was shocked to read it because it was an act of oppression. Its like our freedom to choose is being taken. Because as far as I know, that [the activity] should be voluntary but then they had that announcement. There is no such word as required nor voluntary in the post. But if you read it at first it sounds like [its] mandatory, said Dessa.

Jane* said she was disappointed with the citys leadership, emphasizing that they did not owe a debt of gratitude to the Palmareses.

We are disappointed in our leaders here in Passi City and we are insulted as scholars. They had to include language that would make it seem like we owe the mayor, and like hes the one [who was personally funding] the scholarship program, that we have to support all programs by the mayor and vice mayor, said Jane*.

Jane* also refuted Mayor Palmares Facebook post, placing doubt on the timely release of their clearances and payroll numbers as the time of the program.

If it was not mandatory sir on the first place, why did the [group] admin in [the] city scholars [Facebook group] make that post last night? Why should they issue a clearance just on the day and time of the caravan? Why would they set the date of releasing the payroll numbers on the day of the caravan? she added.

The December 11 caravan of the BBM-Sara Uniteam would start at Mandurriao district in Iloilo City and will pass through the neighboring towns of Leganes, Zarraga, and Pototan, before ending in Passi City.

Palmares confirmed in several media interviews on Friday that neither Marcos Jr. nor Duterte would appear during the caravan, but instead would be proxied by his national campaign manager, MMDA Chairperson BenhurAbalos. Rappler.com

Joseph B.A. Marzan is a Visayas-based journalist from Iloilo City and an awardee of the Aries Rufo Journalism Fellowship.

Read this article:
Passi City scholars allege they are required to welcome Bongbong-Sara caravan - Rappler

Turkeys President Follows His Own Advice Even as Economy Slips – The New York Times

ANKARA, Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sat for an interview on national television late last month, apparently seeking to calm nerves about Turkeys weakening currency and galloping inflation. But the reaction has been anything but calm.

He insisted there was no turning back on his newly announced economic plan, which has promoted policies that seem aimed at defying the laws of economic gravity, like refusing to tick up interest rates to combat rising prices and buttress the value of his currency.

Interest rates make the rich richer, the poor poorer, he said. We have prevented our country being crushed in such a way. We will not allow this.

Turkeys currency, the lira, began sliding virtually as he spoke, capping a day in which it lost 8 percent of its value. It has hardly stopped plunging since mid-November, hitting new lows every few days. Turks have watched staple goods double in price and fuel costs jump by 40 percent.

Mr. Erdogans interview on TRT cost the country billions of lira in just two hours, the opposition Republican Peoples Party spokesman, Faik Oztrak, commented. TRTs show with Erdogan tonight was the most expensive production in TRT history, he said on Twitter. A former prime minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, called on the president to stop. For Gods sake dont talk anymore! he tweeted.

But Mr. Erdogan keeps talking and rattling markets and eroding confidence in the lira and his stewardship of Turkey as he doubles down on a policy prescription that few if any economists agree with and that has left suffering Turks and others wondering why he is doing what hes doing.

Mr. Erdogan has been in power for nearly two decades, with much of his political success built on nearly continuous economic growth that has lifted millions of Turks into the middle class. Facing re-election in 18 months, he is sliding in opinion polls, largely because of the deteriorating economy. His focus is how to turn around the decline in time to boost his election chances.

He is trying to keep the boat afloat in his own way, said Akif Beki, who served as chief adviser to Mr. Erdogan when he was prime minister. He believes that he can turn things around and he can convince people again when elections come closer.

But for now, markets and analysts agree, his medicine is making what ails Turkey worse, and Mr. Erdogan has become increasingly isolated in his economic plan, having narrowed his circle of advisers since his early days as he gathered up virtually authoritarian power for himself.

In particular, Mr. Erdogans switch to a strong presidential system in 2018 has made him more reliant on a small inner circle rather than the wider scope of party officials and elected politicians under the earlier parliamentary system. That has given rise to criticism that he is surrounded by yes-men and increasingly detached from the electorate and economic realities.

Mr. Erdogan has replaced a series of Central Bank chiefs and finance ministers in recent years, confident that he knows the economy better than any of them and reasoning that by controlling monetary policy he could make decisions more efficiently.

He is not listening to the economists which is typical of strongmen, said Ozgur Unluhisarcikli, the director of the Ankara office of the German Marshall Fund of the United States. The president, he added, was increasingly less tolerant of dissent, particularly from within the party.

Indeed, what exasperates many, in businesses large and small, is that Mr. Erdogan is not speaking off the cuff or dropping comments inadvertently. He and his insular team in the presidency, squired by his attentive communications director Fahrettin Altun, have been rolling out prepared speeches, which he delivers live on national television with the aid of a teleprompter.

In his first speech two weeks ago, he expounded at length on his decision to go against most Western economic practice and instead follow China in lowering interest rates and driving down the national currency to balance out Turkeys current account deficit and make its products more attractive for export. He called on Turkish citizens to prepare for a historic struggle in what he cast as an economic war of independence.

He vowed that the country would no longer have to surrender to high interest rates, inflation and currency traps and he promised to improve production, employment and clear the current account deficit.

Turkey may for the first time in its history have the opportunity to follow an economic policy in line with its own needs and realities, he said.

The lira began a free fall within hours of his speech, losing 15 percent of its value in one day. Undeterred Mr. Erdogan gave another speech the next day and several more since, each time reaffirming his determination to lower interest rates in pursuit of growth.

He has reacted to the price increases not by adjusting his own approach but by lashing out at suppliers and warning them not to hoard goods and pressuring supermarkets to keep prices down. Social media was alive Thursday with talk of price increases for toilet paper and milk products.

I am stunned by the increases, said Mehmet Eraltay, who was selling bagels from a cart on the capitals main square Wednesday. It think the end of the world is coming.

Analysts struggled to explain what has prompted Mr. Erdogan to insist on a monetary policy that goes against most widely accepted economic practice of controlling inflation by raising interest rates.

The only thing that is going on now is the upcoming elections, said Mr. Unluhisarcikli, of the German Marshall Fund of the United States. Mr. Erdogan is sliding in the polls, largely because of the economy, and is seeking to regain the momentum ahead of elections in 2023, he said. He is looking for a way out.

Most economists say the Chinese example would take a decade to take effect and could not bring economic relief within six to eight months as Mr. Erdogan is promising.

Mr. Erdogan is also constrained by his political ally, Devlet Bahceli, the right-wing leader of the Nationalist Movement Party, who frequently applies the brakes to proposals by Mr. Erdogan that would improve Turkeys international standing.

Even limited efforts to restore democratic institutions and the independence of the judiciary could go some way to answer investors concerns, Mr. Unluhisarcikli said. It could also help Mr. Erdogans standing with voters, who are feeling increasingly anxious and ignored.

One of the few polling consultants who continues to advise both Mr. Erdogan and his opponents, Mehmet Ali Kulat, said he had to deliver uncomfortable news in their most recent meeting.

His most recent survey found that around 60 percent of respondents were very uncomfortable with the economic situation and 41 percent said they could not meet their essential needs.

There is widespread distrust of government institutions and even anger in reactions of respondents to some questions, Mr. Kulat said. This is something beyond politics.

Yet the president, who is known to closely follow opinion polls, dismissed the poor results and insisted he would still win, Mr. Kulat said. Mr. Erdogan believes the data about the economy that we and other pollsters give is exaggerated, he said.

The leader of an Islamist party, Temel Karamollaoglu, who met with Mr. Erdogan in November, also described the president as dismissive of his concerns.

Mr. President believes that all developments in the economy and foreign policy are fail-safe, he said in an interview published in an online news outlet, Gazete Duvar. He doesnt see any problem. I told him, The information coming to you may be mistaken or different. He doesnt share that idea.

But Mr. Beki, the former adviser, said Mr. Erdogan would be focused on preventing the spread of bad news rather than questioning it.

He believes he knows best, he said. I dont think he listens to advice.

See more here:
Turkeys President Follows His Own Advice Even as Economy Slips - The New York Times

Ghalibaf, Erdogan stress expansion of bilateral relations – Mehr News Agency – English Version

"I hope that the Vienna talks on the implementation of the nuclear agreement will be concluded fairly," the president of Turkey said in the meeting withIranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf in Istanbul on Friday.

Recep Tayyip Erdoan further urged the international organizations to help Iran in dealing with the influxes of Afghan refugees.

Ghalibaf, for his part, emphasized in the meeting that the comprehensive document of cooperation between the two countries is being finalized, which is a symbol of a serious willingness of both nationa to develop relations.

The Iranian parliament speaker further said that the big powers must learn that they must not try to impose their will on other countries,

He further said anagreement in the Vienna talks will be reached if the major western powers show respect for other countries'interests.

Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad BagherGhalibaf arrived in the Turkish city of Istanbul on Wednesdayevening to participate in the meeting of the 16th Parliamentary Union of OIC members.

KI

See the original post:
Ghalibaf, Erdogan stress expansion of bilateral relations - Mehr News Agency - English Version