Daily Archives: May 18, 2023

Starting out on the St. Croix: What High School Skiing Taught Jessie … – fasterskier.com

Posted: May 18, 2023 at 1:51 am

The Stillwater Area High School Girls team celebrates on the steps of the Giants Ridge chalet after a State Championship in 2018. (Photo: MSHSL Archives)

It was, a race people still talk about, said long-time Stillwater Area High School Coach Bill Simpson when FasterSkier interviewed him in February.

Distinctive red and white letterman jackets looked on from the stadium, medals clanging from the giant S insignias in the cold Iron Range wind. Giants Ridge, just outside of Biwabik, looked like the Hoosiers Field House if the janitor had forgotten to turn the heat on. A pairing of two future stars of the sport, Annie Hart and Jessie Diggins, sprinted to the finish of the Minnesota State High School State Nordic Ski Meet side-by-side. Diggins gained an edge, and her teammates joined one-by-one behind as the result became clear and the jubilation began. The Stillwater Ponies won the Minnesota High School State Nordic Ski Championships for the ninthtime in program history, the most of any Girls program in Minnesota State Meet history.

Thirteen years on from her State Meet win, Jessie Diggins became the first American to win an individual World Championship in cross-country skiing. In the wave of adulation from the traditional European skiing world that followed, observers honed in on the two defining characteristics that Diggins has made her signature approach to skiing: 1) a complete focus on the success of her team and 2) her ability to push deeper than any other athlete in the sport. Or, as US Ski Team Program Director Chris Grover characterized it, the recognition that 1) [The Americans are] a team having fun and enjoying the process and 2) the [other side], you see [Jessie] suffering. You see the tempo, pushing so, so hard.

For Diggins, how she pushes and who she pushes for have been connected in her skiing from the beginning. The characteristics that led to an American landing on top of a World Championship podium were forged in an arena unique to American skiingMinnesota high school skiing, with its over two-thousand yearly participants.

In a pre-World Championships press conference in February, Diggins said shooting for the team title of Minnesota State Champions with her Stillwater teammates was the first time that I broke through that first level you push to in racing. I went, Oh my God, theres so much more in my body than I ever realized, and I can do this. For her, there was a traceable line from Giants Ridge to Planica, Slovenia, having to figure out how to allow myself to care as much about my own races as I would care about my teams. Still today, Diggins adds, put my teammates at the finish line, and it all comes out.

In high school skiing, said Bill Simpson, the golden rule is not to turn anyone away. In Stillwater, and in the High School circuit it races, there is an emphasis on accessibility and the absolute power of teamwork which serves as a grassroots source for what the wider-world of skiing is recognizing as American skiings signature qualities: the importance of teamwork, of celebrating the competitors as much as the competition itself, and of pursuing the experience of ski racing as much as the competition.

Today, high school circuits face the ever-evolving challenge of balancing tradition and that golden rule of accessibility, all while pushing forward with more skiers than ever.

The Minnesota High School State Meet has been held every year since 1939, making it the oldest continuously running cross-country ski race in the United States. The tradition was a confluence of the states particular melting pot last century, when the Scandinavian diaspora saw many pioneers of the modern ski sport immigrate to the Midwest. For generations of Minnesotans (before the Vikings started playing Football), the popular way to pass a Sunday afternoon was at the foot of a ski jump. All it took was a Duluth boy named Billy Anderson approaching his physical education teacher to get a high school league formed, and from 1933 on, the Minnesota State Nordic Ski Meet has been held. Cross-country skiing, second in popularity to ski jumping as a nordic skiing discipline early on, was added permanently after 1938. For a full history of this nascent period, read Ryan Rogers extensively researched history of skiing in the state, Winters Children.

Bill Simpson started coaching the Stillwater Ponies in the mid-70s. Simpson, a teacher in Marine on St. Croix, was recruited to coach the first Stillwater High School Girls Team after Title IX was passed in 1972 and showed up to his first State Meet in 1975. Even after Title IX, girls still werent allowed to ski jump in high school competition, said Simpson. That ultimately led to the Nordic Ski State Meet becoming a cross-country only affair after 1977 and marked the start of the rapid development of the sport thereafter.

Simpson quickly went on a recruiting drive when the Girls team was added, grooming trails right around the Marine on St. Croix elementary school that allowed kids to stick around after school and hop on skis. Keeping the barrier to entry low paid off. When that group of Marine on St. Croix elementary schoolers reached Stillwater High School in the mid-80s, they would enjoy an unrivaled stretch of success, winning the State Team Championship every year from 1982-1987.

The star of those Stillwater Ponies teams was Kris Hansen. Hansen would win the State Meet individually in 1985 and 1986, which coincided with a rapid shift from classic to freestyle skiing, In 1985, everyone was still classic skiing, with some marathon skate thrown-in. In 1986, everyone was skate skiing, Hansen wrote to FasterSkier in February. Hansen was a sophomore and junior during her 85 and 86 triumphs, and contributed to the last of Stillwaters mid-80s team title in 1987 while being ineligible to win the individual title after missing qualifying to compete at World Junior Championships. That unfortunate rule would lead to a fortunate lesson: Competing that year taught me the absolute power of being part of a team, Hansen said. There was constant thinking on how to strengthen our collective performance and achieve that group goal [of a Team title].

For Hansen, the lessons learned became the core of the philosophy around which she would structure the Stillwater team when she returned to coach it in the late 1990s. Her old coach, Bill Simpson, was still around, and fostering local kids love of skiing from an early age. Then and today, the Stillwater program fluctuates between 100-200 skiers on its roster at a time. It rivals the biggest club programs in the country, while drawing from a stretch of hilly bluffs and Twin Cities exurbs alongside the St. Croix river. It is one of the larger programs in Minnesota, but is also just one of 94 school districts in the state that sponsor a high school program. The sum total of high schoolers racing in Minnesota every year is over 2000. Programs stretch from small Iron Range towns to downtown Minneapolis, with skiers putting on skinny skis in just about every topography Minnesota has to offer. Golf courses, woodlots on the back forty, one of those 10,000 lakes or the shores of a one so big they called it Superior; youre likely to find ski tracks on any of them when the winter hits. Its what Hansen calls the magic of the high school program: you dont need to come from a ski family to learn and grow as a skier here.

In Stillwater, and other programs like it, the tradition of high school skiing forms a feedback loop that continues today. We had a community where young people had mentors their own age, Hansen said. And then, the opportunity to become mentors for others. Everyone feels their value in a place like that.

Hansens approach helped build another Stillwater Team Champion team in 2008, and then again in 2010, with Jessie Diggins leading both efforts. Her personal highlight as a coach, though, would come eight years later. Both of my twins skied at the State Meet as team captains, Hansen remembered. My daughters team won and my sons team was runner-up. And then Jessie and Kikkan won their Gold; February 2018 is hard to beat.

It was a moment of clairvoyance for what had powered US Skiing to an historic milestone. High school skiing is an outlier in skier development models across the world. It is a kind of inherited relic from when American culture intersected the Scandinavian diaspora early last century in the Midwest. But its key ethos is something that remained all the way through to Pyeongchang. A basis in community, a commitment to accessibility, and a unique emphasis on the power of team in an individual sport: high school skiing had been informing decades of US skiers, and now one of them, Jessie Diggins, had taken it, leaned in, and propelled herself and her teammates to the top of the sport. Hansen could celebrate on the terms by which she defines the sport of skiing: one member of her team stood atop an Olympic podium with a medal, another generation was learning simultaneously back in Minnesota. Her ski community was still growing, still pushing, still welcoming more young athletes to try skiing, and then emphasizing working together once they were on there.

Five years on from the Pyeongchang gold medal, Diggins is still forging new paths for American skiing, while her approach to the sport has become a grounding for an entirely new generation on a nation-wide scale. Aside from winning an individual World Championship in Planica, she also teamed up with Julia Kern to help win a bronze for the US in the Team Sprint, helping Kern become the first American athlete of the next generation of US skiers to win a World Championship medal. In a pre-race press conference, Diggins was as attentive to her teammates strengths as ever, emphasizing her trust and her admiration for Kerns fitness, her distance chops, the raw speed, the tactics, the confidence, and her ability to also just dig, all out, for the team. That above all, is what is really special about our team.

For the countrys oldest ski circuit, change has always been a feature rather than a bug. Those changes have almost always included debates on how to keep the accessibility of high school skiing open, while preparing skiers to compete in the sport of cross-country skiing at its highest level. There has always been a weird spot where the top athletes here are some of the top athletes in the country, said Simpson. There is something cool about that though, too; we have athletes in Norway one week, and then back at their Section race the next. How many high school sports is that happening in? In the past, balancing a sport with an international outlook has meant cutting ski jumping from the Nordic ski program, adding classic skiing back into the sport after it was abandoned in the late 1980s, and adopting a pursuit format for the State Meet. Presently, though, the biggest challenges in keeping community-based Minnesota high school strong are the shifting demographics of the Gopher States communities, themselves.

For a long time, there were new programs every few years, but thats not so much the case anymore, said Simpson. And the schools in the [rural] northern part of the state are increasingly putting co-ops together in order to try and keep their numbers on a similar scale to the Twin Cities schools, where participation in cross-country skiing has exploded during the pandemic. The trend highlights a long-rooted dynamic between more rural programs from the states varied rural landscapes and the Twin Cities metro area.

That rural-metro divide is also one that is increasingly colored by another distinct phenomenon: the rise of club skiing in the Midwest. Long a fixture of Western junior circuits, club skiing was a relatively small component of junior skiing in Minnesota, and in neighboring Wisconsin and Michigan, until a generation ago. Since then, big programs such as the Twin Cities Loppet Nordic Racing, which currently holds the title of Best Club in the country at Junior Nationals, have increasingly become home for high school athletes with a year-round focus on ski training, and from across a wide swath of communities that once trained in their own, distinct programs. I worry about the club culture, said Hansen. For me, the feature of the high school program is that you dont need to come from a ski family, and you dont need to have a huge bank account to learn and grow as a skier and as a member of a team. In contrast to the no-fee or modest fee structure most high school programs have traditionally had, club ski programs in the state can cost a family anywhere from hundreds to thousands of dollars in yearly registration fees (many do offer scholarships to offset costs for families). Many deliberations from the Minnesota High School Coaches Association over the past decade have allowed a hybrid model to emerge in the state, where athletes often race and belong to both a club and a high school program. That is a tricky balancing act always said Simpson, but also One that makes the best out of the realities that people are willing to invest in skiing.

Logistical challenges also loom large in the future of the high school circuit. Were a winter sport, and [in Minnesota] were losing winters with climate change, said Simpson. Were increasingly competing for time on a limited number of man-made snow loops with every other team in the state. For Stillwater, that means an hour-long drive to get on snow compared to being able to step out of the high school on groomed snow consistently when Simpson started. Man-made loops once used by Metro area schools exclusively in the early season are also increasingly becoming called upon for schools from beyond the Metro, and for more of the season, than ever before. Snowmaking efforts in Duluth have eased the congestion in recent years, but the chase for snow still requires more time set aside to get to venues and is a prohibitive cost for schools looking to add the sport explained Simpson.

Year-to-year, thousands of kids [are] involved in high school skiing, says Simpson. If we can hold onto that number, and hold onto what has made high school skiing special, well be doing ok.

I will always cherish my athletes coming together with their best performances and to see a community work so hard to achieve something together, said Kris Hansen.

With an eye towards capturing that special essence of high school skiing, athletes, coaches, supporters, communities, and teams returned to Giants Ridge last February. It rained on day one before the sky cleared and a bout of brutal Minnesota winter cold swept over the glacial knolls and through the bare oaks and maples. The crowd that gathered had yet to watch Jessie Diggins stand atop a World Championship podium (that championship milestone would be achieved a few weeks later) but arrived knowing that what it would see was what they had seen on display from that champion, in this venue, that had radiated out through the sport of skiing over the past decade. The kids were here, and they would push for themselves, for their communities and, most importantly, for their teams.

This year, those values came fast, hard, and close into the Giants Ridge stadium. In the Girls race, results came down to a split second. In the Boys race, results were decided by even less. Zoe Devine, from the small Iron Range town of Ely, won the girls race over Duluths Lydia Kraker. Benon Brattebo, from the Twin Cities suburb Eden Prairie, outstretched Blaines Ben Lewis; their times both officially even, 26:00.9. Red and black suits flooded into the stadium to celebrate a team championshipthis time belonging to Duluth Eastwith Stillwater taking second in the Girls competition.

The athletes had pushed hard for each other and had given it their all. Powerhouse programs that have long stood out in their nearly century-long existence etched their name into yet another year of lore. It was typical of Minnesota high school skiing, which only served to highlight how atypical it was. The letterman jackets, the familiar faces here year-after-year as athletes, then coaches, then parents, then just fans. It was a race that a decade from now, as one of the wise-old stalwarts of the whole spectacle, Bill Simpson, would put it, will prove to be one people still talk about. And that is as good a reassurance as any that high school skiing is a grand tradition, and a vital one too.

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Simon Cowell to break important BGT rule this weekend, ITV confirms – South Wales Argus

Posted: at 1:51 am

Simon Cowell is said to smash the golden buzzer for a second time despite already selecting the act he wanted to instantly send through to the live semi-finals.

This seems to be influenced by Strictly star Bruno Tonioli after he did the same thing a few weeks.

The new judge was pranked as he arrived on the Britain's Got Talent set when the duo Ant and Dec told him the wrong rules, causing confusion among the judging panel.

While the act Simon Cowell hits the golden buzzer for has not yet been revealed, the TV personality can be seen ripping up therule book as he sends another through to the semi-finals.

The hint was revealed on the official BGT Twitter account in a post reading: "Wait... ANOTHER Golden Buzzer?! We just can't keep up anymore!"

In the accompanying video, Simon Cowell can be heard saying: "Sometimes, I feel you should just break the rules..." to the shock of Bruno.

Fans took to the comments to criticise the extra golden buzzer as well as the new series of the show.

One viewer said: "Saturdays show.dear god. 2 decent acts in 90 minutes. Anything half decent gets a golden buzzer."

Another added: "Maybe this show has had its day, too scripted" while others hit out at the over-use of golden buzzers.

One fed-up fan said: "Soo what's the actual rules with the Golden Buzzer?? Do they all have two Golden Buzzers now? This is all so god damn confusing now!!"

While another said: "This is, without a doubt, the worst series ever of #BGT. It is the biggest load of crap. There was no need for another golden buzzer last, yeah he could sing...but he wasn't anything special."

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These are the weirdest and least understood pickleball rules and … – msnNOW

Posted: at 1:51 am

Pickleball is one of Americasfastest-growing sports. The ease of access, simple gameplay, nonstop action, and social connection makes pickleball an attractive sport. Like any love affair, though, there are finer points and certain pickleball rules that need to be defined a little more explaining. And as with becoming a professional at any sport, its critical to understand the finer elements of gameplay.

Pickleball rules might be easy to understand, but its in the specific details that things get muddy. Were here to review some of the most unusual and lesser-known pickleball rules and regulations to make sure all of your matches remain friendly.

Lets get an easy one out of the way first.USA Pickleballdeems that, except for prescribed or necessary devices like hearing aids, players shall not wear or use any form of headphones or earbuds during competition play.

This could be left up to those playing to decide for themselves during their game. But in general and during serious play, personal audio equipment is a no-no, even if Rage Against the Machine brings your game to another level.

Generally, the preferred arena for pickleball is on an outside court. During an intense rally, these accessories fly off, causing at least an interruption in concentration. Could this equipment loss also result in a point loss?

According toThe Pickler blog, a fault occurs if an item lands in the non-volley zone in connection with a volley a volley defined as hitting the pickleball before it bounces. In other words, if a player strikes the pickleball in the air and a towel flies off into the non-volley zone, its a point for the other side. If the discarded item lands in the non-volley zone off the bounce, then no fault.

If equipment lands anywhere outside of the non-volley zone, on the court or not, the play keeps going. This applies even if the pickleball hits the lost item. Obviously, its going to be tough to gauge the bounce off of a dropped hat or shirt, so make sure to keep things tight so you dont lose a point. And, to be on the safe side, continue playing no matter what until a fault is called.

Pickleball might be a loose game, but players are expected to control their apparel and keep their equipment in playable condition. Quick adjustments to apparel or equipment tying shoes, cleaning shades, adjusting hats are allowed between rallies.

Time-outs and the two minutes between games are for more complicated adjustments and replacing gear. PerUSA Pickleballs Official Rulebook, if a player or team is out of time-outs, the referee holds the key to determining the need for an equipment change or necessary adjustment, allotting a potential two-minute timeout.

More recently, pickleball instituted a 10-second rule to discourage those players who take forever to serve. The USA Rulebook applies to servers and receivers, each of whom is allowed up to 10 seconds after the score is called to serve or be ready to receive. Its the servers responsibility to make sure the other side is ready, but that 10 seconds is technically ticking as soon as the referee calls out the score.

If 10 seconds elapse without a serve, the ref issues a technical warning. If this delay continues, referees could award the opposing team a point. This also applies to the receiving side, which has to be ready to receive the serve once the score has been called.

Allowing more than 10 seconds between points drags the game out and lessens the competition if players are allowed to recuperate after every tough rally. Theres no crying in baseball, and theres no mercy in pickleball.

Competitors who need a break should call a timeout before the serve. The rules allow players and teams two one-minute timeouts per each 11-point game. For 21-point games, three timeouts are allowed.

As for serving, its pretty simple. Theres more leeway in recreational pickleball, but there are rules about the serving motion that pickleballers should be aware of, especially in more serious competition. More veteran players should turn to the International Federation of Pickleball Official Tournament Rulebook.

Per the IFPsofficial tourney rules, the serve must be made with an underhand stroke so that contact with the ball is made below waist level (waist is defined as the navel level).

Why is this important? Well, overhead shots produce more power. Skirting the gray area of this rule could give players a slight edge. If the paddle head strikes the ball above the belly button, this results in a fault. This is so important that the IFP defines what underhand means.

The arm must be moving in an upward arc and the paddle head shall be below the wrist when it strikes the ball (paddle head is that part of the paddle excluding the handle. The highest point of the paddle head cannot be above any part of the line formed where the wrist joint bends).

This cuts out slicing, smashing, and the topspin, unless players achieve that via underhand serve. For a more in-depth exploration of the underhand serve, check out the Pickleball Channels extended guide:

Pickleball regulars know that when serving the ball must clear the kitchen line. The kitchen is the seven-foot-long no-go zone for volleys. The line is two inches thick, and a players serve cannot touch any part of this line, needing instead to completely clear it for a valid serve. If the ball hits the kitchen or the kitchen line, its a fault.

Its also a fault if the pickleball grazes the net before landing in play space. The rule used to be that clipping the net and then landing in the serving box was a let (like tennis), but that has evolved with the game. Once a successful serve has landed, the ball is in play and can land on any court line to stay in play. The only time the lines are considered out is at the back of the kitchen on a serve.

Speaking of line calls, lets lay out a few guidelines for line calling. Mostly, pickleball is played for fun, so its helpful to take a do unto others attitude.

Applying those IFP tourney rules, players on line-calling duty must give opponents the benefit of the doubt to keep up fair play. To define who should make line calls, players should only make calls on their section of the court. Players should not question an opponents call unless the other player asks or if theres an appeal to the referee.

Judgment calls should be up to those with a perspective straight down the line. Calls need to be quick and made while the ball is still in play. Pickleball is a fast and furious game where calls are tough. In general, give your opponent the benefit of the doubt. Ethics are important.

Spectators may never participate in line calls. High-level pickleball competitions have already had past issues with this. If youre watching a match, you are a spectator and not allowed to have your say. Just zip it and enjoy the match.

Sports like baseball and especially hockey come with a lot of trash talk between the teams and even the fans and the players. In pickleball, thats all a huge no. Think along the lines of tennis and golf, where there is complete silence for the swing and serve.

Now, talking between players, as in calling out what kind of shot they think is going to happen or who is getting the hit, is completely fine. You are playing a sport, and you will have to chat with each other.

Now that you know every single in and out of how to play pickleball, even the grittier pickleball rules, enjoy getting a bit of hands-on experience. Theres no limit to how much enjoyment youll get playing one of the most popular sports right now.

Pickleball, like all other sports, will continue to evolve with time, play, and technology. What will remain is the games core philosophy: pickleball is meant to be fun. While official pickleball rules are there to provide a level playing field and an accurate sport, the Golden Rule is always a good default, so everyone enjoys playing.

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Media Source Not Showing in OBS? Here’s How to Fix It – MUO – MakeUseOf

Posted: at 1:51 am

There is nothing more frustrating as a streamer than spending hours crafting your own unique media source, importing it to OBS, and finding that its not working and not knowing why.

OBS settings can be tricky, and they are not always explicitly explained. If you dont know what a setting does in the first place, it is hard to know what needs to be activated and what doesnt. There are many things that can go wrong with your media source in OBS, but here are some of the most common reasons why a media source may not be showing up on your stream.

A media source is a video file that you can add to your stream. They could be anything, but one of the most common types of media source are countdowns. Many streamers go live a couple of minutes early and have a virtual timer that counts down until they get there. This allows their viewers to get their Go Live notification and enter the stream before it actually begins.

Many streamers also have an animated overlay on their stream. Animated backgrounds are more dynamic than static images, and it is also extremely easy to make your own animated Twitch background on Canva, so they are a popular choice. Animated overlays are video files rather than static JPGs or PNGs, which means they have to be added as a media source.

OBS can be a learning experience, to say the least, and like most technology, it doesnt always work the way you expect it to. Even if, on one stream, everything is going great and your media source is working perfectly, that might not be the case the next time you open OBS.

In these cases, it is difficult to understand what went wrong, especially if you haven't changed anything since the last time you were on OBS. But the chances are that there was one setting or another that you didn't set up quite right when you imported your media source. Its just a matter of finding it.

Here are the most common issues that can cause your media source to not show up in OBS, and how to fix them. These should be on your checklist of things to do before going live.

The very first thing you should check when your media source or any other asset on your stream isnt working is whether it is hidden or not. This is the most obvious fix, but its also the best one because it's incredibly easy to solve.

To double-check if your media source is hidden, look for your Sources section. This will be down the bottom of the window, to the right of Scenes. Find your media source in your list of sources and look at the icons on the right.

There should be two icons beside your media source, one of which looks like an eye. If the eye icon is grayed out, with a line across it, your media source is hidden. If that's the case, just click the icon again and your media source should appear.

Another one of the most common reasons why your media source isnt visible is if you dont have it on loop. Depending on your media source, the loop setting is the most important. This is especially true when it comes to animated overlays.

Animated overlays are usually relatively short videos. If you import your overlay to OBS and you don't activate the Loop setting, your video file will only play once and then disappear. Looping your file ensures that your overlay will stay on screen and continuously replay while you're streaming.

To check if your media source is looped, open your media source in the Sources section by double-clicking it, or right-click and select Properties. Underneath the search bar that allows you to find and select your media source from your computer's files, you will see the Loop setting. Make sure that box is ticked.

This setting is the most confusing because you wouldn't immediately expect that it's the culprit. The Restart playback when stream becomes active setting makes your video file replay from the beginning when you switch to or from the source that contains it.

If everything else appears to be set up correctly on your media source, sometimes toggling this setting on and off can trigger your media source to appear. To toggle this setting on or off, open your media source by finding it in your Sources section and double-clicking it, or right-click and select Properties.

The Restart playback when source becomes active setting is right underneath the Loop setting. Check the box to turn it on, and click it again to toggle the setting off.

You know what they say; the golden rule when troubleshooting technology is to turn it off and back on again. That rule still applies to OBS. Sometimes the program could be having some technical difficulties, and performing a simple restart could be all it needs to fix your media source.

Restarting OBS can also be required to save settings and make sure they are in effect. So restarting the program after changing your settings or if you are sure your source is set up properly but still isnt working is always recommended.

If the restart doesnt help your case, it also cant hurt to make sure your OBS is updated to the latest version. Running an old version of OBS can lead to performance issues, so if you want to ensure that your OBS is operating to the best of its abilities, it will need to be up-to-date.

OBS should run a check to see if there are any updates as you open it. If so, a pop-up box will appear asking you if you would like to install the updates. Press Update Now to download and install the updates.

If you didnt press Update Now, you can also check for any current updates by selecting Help from the menu at the top of the screen. Select Check for Updates, and install them if there are any.

If your media source isnt visible, and you arent sure whats wrong with it, one of these tips should help get everything running smoothly again.

Whether its an animated overlay, a countdown, or any other media source that youve added to OBS, they all add character to your stream, so making sure they are up and running is very important. Especially if you spent hours on Canva making your own, or you paid an artist to make one for you.

OBS is a great program, but just like everything else, it can have its issues sometimes. Jumping on the computer 30 minutes or so before you are scheduled to start streaming can give you the time you need to go through any of these fixes without running the risk of being late.

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Youngkin avoids talk of diversity, politics at VMI graduation – Cardinal News

Posted: at 1:51 am

Gov. Glenn Youngkin largely avoided politics on Tuesday as he spoke to just over 300 new graduates of the Virginia Military Institute, a campus thats been eclipsed by controversy over the past few years, including in recent weeks.

In a speech that focused on the values instilled in the cadets of the state-supported military college, Youngkin called upon the mission of VMI to guide the graduates in their careers in the military or private sector.

You live by a code, Youngkin said. A code that incorporates words like integrity, character, respect. A code that stands against prejudice, hate and oppression.

The governors speech was punctuated by frequent bursts of applause.

Youngkin visited the campus two weeks ago to visit with cadets and prepare for his commencement speech.

But it was a speech by one of his appointees just a few days prior to that visit that drew a critical eye to the campus once again, after years of scrutiny over reports of systemic racism.

On April 21, Youngkins chief diversity officer, Martin Brown, declared in a speech at VMI that DEI [diversity, equity, and inclusion] is dead.

According to a Washington Post report and video of the speech, Brown said: Were not going to bring that cow up anymore. Its dead. It was mandated by the General Assembly, but this governor has a different philosophy of civil discourse, civility, treating living the golden rule, right?

Various groups have called for Brown to resign, including the Virginia NAACP and the states legislative Black and Latino caucuses. Former Gov. Doug Wilder has also called for Brown to step down.

Youngkins predecessor, Gov. Ralph Northam, ordered an investigation into claims of racist and sexist practices baked into the culture of the school after reports of discrimination in 2020. VMI has worked since to implement DEI training, a concept that Youngkin has generally opposed since taking over in early 2022. Under Youngkins orders, the state now refers to DEI as diversity, opportunity and inclusion or DOI.

The state college has seen an administrative overhaul and has worked to implement diversity training, which has roiled segments of the alumni base that claim the need for changes at VMI are overblown.

Of the 1,500 students at VMI for the 2022-2023 school year, fewer than 400 were not white, according to state data. The school has struggled to bring up enrollment numbers in recent years, and its alumni office missed its recent fundraising goals by a significant margin.

The class of 2023 endured dual challenges, with the investigation of campus culture occurring concurrently with the COVID-19 pandemic.

This class is unlike any other, Youngkin said. You have endured the pandemic. You have dealt with distractions that were not of your own making.

He also claimed he was the cadets favorite governor, in part because during his visit a few weeks ago he granted them amnesty from some minor infractions they had accrued.

The class, which started with 515 students four years ago, is completing its time at VMI with 53% moving on to commissioned service in the military, across all branches and including the Space Force.

Perhaps the governors most outwardly political statement came when Youngkin pointed out four graduates in the class who will go on to military service in Taiwan. Those graduates, he said, are ready to defend your home against oppression from the Peoples Republic of China. Please know that we stand with you.

Maj. Gen. Cedric Wins, who also spoke, is the schools first Black superintendent. He took over in spring 2021, succeeding General J.H. Binford Peay, who resigned in fall 2020. Wins also avoided directly addressing the schools struggles, instead noting that the corps is on strong footing.

One of the things Id like you to take away as you graduate is my recollection of the turmoil about our culture that was imposed upon the entire corps, and my message to you upon my arrival, Wins said. Those challenges were never about you. Nonetheless, I asked you to hold the narrative and let people see who you really are as cadets of character who embody an oath that few if any colleges could come close to living up to. You did so magnificently.

Among the praises shared with the graduates and their families today, Youngkin singled out The Cadet newspaper, which received seven awards from the Virginia Press Association earlier this month. The awards included the groups top annual prize for journalistic integrity and public service.

The newspaper, which was revived in 2021 with assistance from an alumnus who recently sued the college over a DEI-related contract, submitted a package of content about diversity, equity and inclusion that included unsigned opinion pieces. The newspaper is not sanctioned by the school, and the papers parent foundation has launched a campaign to solicit donations from alumni outside of the official alumni fundraising efforts.

But the focus on the student newspaper was brief, as Youngkin quickly turned his attention to meals at VMIs Crozet Hall. The governor said hed heard resoundingly from cadets that the dining hall menu had improved, and congratulated the campus dining leadership for their accomplishments, to cheers and laughter from the crowd.

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Mother’s Day roots: the opposition to war | READER COMMENTARY – Baltimore Sun

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As the commercial world gears up to convince us all to celebrate Mothers Day in increasingly extravagant material ways, its worth looking back at the original anti-war inspiration for this $32 billion annual boondoggle (at least according to Forbes last year).

Slavery abolitionist Julia Ward Howe, sadly better known for her militaristic Civil War paean, Battle Hymn of the Republic, experienced a profound epiphany once she realized the scope of that wars carnage. That included more than 600,000 dead (about 2% of the United States population at the time) and millions injured.

Taking up her quill again in 1870, she penned this Mothers Day Proclamation, a cry for a national day to honor all mothers everywhere by renouncing war:

Again, in the sight of the Christian world, have the skill and power of two great nations exhausted themselves in mutual murder. Again have the sacred questions of international justice been committed to the fatal mediation of military weapons. In this day of progress, in this century of light, the ambition of rulers has been allowed to barter the dear interests of domestic life for the bloody exchanges of the battle field. Thus men have done. Thus men will do. But women need no longer be made a party to proceedings which fill the globe with grief and horror. Despite the assumptions of physical force, the mother has a sacred and commanding word to say to the sons who owe their life to her suffering. That word should now be heard, and answered to as never before.

Arise, then, Christian women of this day! Arise, all women who have hearts, Whether your baptism be that of water or of tears! Say firmly: We will not have great questions decided by irrelevant agencies. Our husbands shall not come to us, reeking with carnage, for caresses and applause. Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn all that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience. We, women of one country, will be too tender of those of another country, to allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs. From the bosom of the devastated earth a voice goes up with our own. It says: Disarm, disarm! The sword of murder is not the balance of justice. Blood does not wipe out dishonor, nor violence vindicate possession. As men have often forsaken the plough and the anvil at the summons of war, let women now leave all that may be left of home for a great and earnest day of council.

Let them meet first, as women, to bewail and commemorate the dead. Let them then solemnly take council with each other as to the means whereby the great human family can live in peace, man as the brother of man, each bearing after his own kind the sacred impress, not of Caesar, but of God.

In the name of womanhood and of humanity, I earnestly ask that a general congress of women, without limit of nationality, may be appointed and held at some place deemed most convenient, and at the earliest period consistent with its objects, to promote the alliance of the different nationalities, the amicable settlement of international questions, the great and general interests of peace.

Her heartfelt proclamation, undeniable in its raw truth, resonated with her fellow peace advocates and suffragettes including one Ann Jarvis with whom she campaigned for a Mothers Day For Peace. Anns eventual ailing health and death in 1905 inspired her daughter, Anna Jarvis, to successfully launch a Mothers Day campaign with a memorial service to honor Ann and all women.

Annas seminal celebration featured her distribution of 500 white carnations, symbolizing the purity and enduring qualities of a mothers love. This was quickly seized upon by the floral, card and confection industries of the time and some of the rest of this history is evident all around us. Opposed to the exploitation of the occasion, Anna later campaigned to repudiate Mothers Day but was committed to a sanitarium for the last four years of her life, the costs, whether ironically or deliberately, paid for by the very industries shed opposed.

In Baltimore, the anti-war roots of this new national day were not forgotten as immediately. In 1919, following World War I, a public celebration of the now officially singular Mothers Day involved the planting of 51 trees in a memorial Grove Of Remembrance in Druid Hill Park one for each state plus Baltimore City, the U.S. Allies and the wartime President Woodrow Wilson. Its still there with new trees since added for our subsequent wars, the core message all but ignored.

Julia Howes 1870 Proclamation addressed her Christian world but embraced every woman everywhere. Her proposal was an incarnation of the ancient Golden Rule Treat others the same way you want others to treat you!

On this years Mothers Day, Sunday May 14, the original restored peace sailboat, the Golden Rule, will be docked in Philadelphia, The City of Brotherly Love. The Golden Rule is on a 15-month, 11,000-mile Great Loop voyage managed by its owners, the non-profit organization Veterans For Peace. It celebrated the 65th anniversary of its first 1958 effort to stop open-air nuclear bomb testing in the Marshall Islands here in Baltimore this past May 1. Officially welcomed and saluted by the Baltimore City Council and its president and the Havre de Grace City Council and mayor, it sails these days to continue raising awareness of our need to abolish these insane doomsday weapons of indiscriminate destruction.

Specifically, the Golden Rule Project advocates for non-partisan global endorsement of the United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, a treaty already ratified by 68 nations with 24 more in the pipeline. It has also been endorsed so far by 19 thoughtful members of the U.S. House of Representatives including Marylands Jamie Raskin and Glenn Ivey. Not a bad start, but nowhere near enough.

This Mothers Day, urge your member of Congress to endorse House Resolution 77 Embracing the Goals of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and the Back From The Brink campaign. Make Mothers Day really mean something again!

If not now, when?

Louis Brendan Curran, Baltimore

The writer is a retired Baltimore assistant public defender.

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Rep. Gallagher says US needs to take off ‘golden blindfolds’ and ‘open our eyes’ to China risk – Fox News

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Rep. Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., said during a Select Committee hearing on the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) that the United States needs to open its eyes to the risks posed by China.

Gallagher made the statement during Wednesday's hearing focusing on strategic competition between the United States and CCP.

"We need to take off the golden blindfolds and open our eyes to the risks in China," Gallagher said. "American businesses shouldn't be complicit in the CCP's ongoing genocide. An American capital should not fuel human rights abuses. Investment managers, especially U.S. pension and retirement fund stewards can't ignore their fiduciary duties."

"Just in the past few months, the CCP has increasingly criminalized routine due diligence, making a mockery of the system of transparent disclosures that undergirds our capital markets and undermined the rule of law," Gallagher said.

CALIFORNIA REP IN HEAVILY ASIAN-AMERICAN DISTRICT FIGHTS AGAINST CHINESE COMMUNIST INFLUENCE IN EDUCATION

Chairman Rep. Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., listens during a hearing of a special House committee dedicated to countering China, on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Wednesday's hearing sought witness testimony from those who will outline the "pervasive scope of the CCPs economic espionage in the U.S."

The House China committee was approved in an overwhelming bipartisan vote in January to establish the Select Committee on China, which is designed to re-examine the country's strategic competition with China.

GOP, DEMOCRATS TEAM UP TO BLOCK CHINA FROM BUYING UP US FARMLAND

China's national flag is seen in front of cranes on a construction site at a commercial district in Beijing, China, January 26, 2016. (REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon)

"We spent decades passing policies that welcomed China into the global system," House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said in January. "In return, China has exported oppression, aggression and anti-Americanism. Today, the power of its military and economy are growing at the expense of freedom and democracy worldwide."

Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., conducts a news conference in the U.S. Capitols Statuary Hall on Thursday, January 12, 2023. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

McCarthy said there's bipartisan consensus that the era of trusting "communist China" has ended.

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The House voted 365-65 to approve the creation of the committee.

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Open Heaven 18 May 2023: The Gift of Love – ELANHUB MEDIA

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Open Heaven 18 May 2023MEMORISE: And now abideth faith,hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity. 1 Corinthians 13:13 (KJV)BIBLE READING: 1 Corinthians 13:1-13

1 Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.

2 And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing.

3 And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing.

4 Charity suffereth long, and is kind; charity envieth not; charity vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up,

5 Doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil;

6 Rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth;

7 Beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things.

8 Charity never faileth: but whether there be prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be knowledge, it shall vanish away.

9 For we know in part, and we prophesy in part.

10 But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away.

11 When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.

12 For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.

13 And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.

Read Other Open Heaven Devotional here

The Bible takes the subject of love so seriously that it is equated with the sum of all the commandments of God (Matthew 22:36-40). The Bible goes further to say that love is the fulfilment of the law (Romans 13:10). The use of the word Law in the Bible, is usually a reference to all the commandments and statutes recorded in the Old Testament. Now, the reality that God equates love to the whole of the Old Testament Bible is serious food for thought. The Bible in 1 Corinthians 13:1-2 says:

Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing.

The passage above speaks clearly about the importance of love and how children of God should rate it on the scale of spirituality. Here, God compared some special spiritual gifts of uncommon value to love. Speaking in the tongues of men and angels means the ability to speak in heavenly tongues as well as interpreting it in the language of men. The interpretation of tongues has always been a rare gift that is highly sought after in the body of Christ, yet anyone with this gift without having love is described as sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal viewed by God as a mere noisemaker.

Furthermore, the Bible says if one should have the gift of prophecy, understand all mysteries and have all knowledge, with enough faith to do great miracles, without love, such a person would amount to nothing in the eyes of God. Love is the golden rule by which whatever gifts we exhibit and whatever services we offer to God are measured. Therefore, love is the ultimate commandment. Romans 13:10 says, Love worketh no ill to his neighbour: therefore love is the fulfilling of the law. The service that pleases God is one from the heart, rendered in love. God is love. If you are born again, you have the capacity to manifest the agape love. It is a compulsory virtue in Christianity.

REFLECTION: To what extent does love manifest in your life and ministry?

Thank you for studying todays Open Heaven The Gift of Love written by Pastor Enoch Adeboye

Dont forget to Follow Elanhub on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

Open Heaven 18 May 2023

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10 Best Quotes About Family In The Fast & Furious Franchise – CBR – Comic Book Resources

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The Fast & Furious franchise has evolved from street racing and basic heists to espionage. However, even as the stakes get higher and the threats get bigger, one thing has remained a constant: the theme of family. Dominic "Dom" Toretto frequently discusses family, whether he's referring to his crew, friends, or son.

RELATED: Fast & Furious: 10 Times The Heroes Couldn't Be Trusted

Dom's love of family has spawned many memes, but he isnt the only one who discusses family in the Fast & Furious franchise. Other characters also understand how much Dom respects his crew, which fans often see in their remarks.

LAPDs Sgt. Tanners words in the first Fast & Furious movie sum up the theme of family in the franchise. Some families are related by blood, but Dom's crew are together because they share a common goal.

When Tanner realizes that Brian has no interest in providing evidence against Dominic Toretto, he lays down the options. If he chooses to protect Dom, there will be consequences. However, if he does excellent undercover work, he will be rewarded. Brian decides to risk his career, proving himself as one of the bravest Fast & Furious characters.

Deckard Shaw might be Doms ally, but in his first appearances, his only agenda was to take Dom down for what he did to Owen. During one of their confrontations, Deckard Shaw boasts about how many friends he has, but Dom doesn't care.

RELATED: Fast & Furious: The 7 Best Rivals, Ranked

Dom's counter-argument is far stronger. Dom states that, unlike Deckard, his people are more loyal because they view each other as family. Shaw's associates might easily switch allegiances any minute because the only thing thats making them care about him is the Gods Eye program.

Thanks to wild stunts and a concrete plot, Fast Five is one of the best Fast & Furious films. The fifth installment marks the first time the whole crew gathers for a mission, and their teamwork pays off when they manage to steal $100 million from the Brazilian crime kingpin, Hernan Reyes.

After the mission, Dom gathers the crew for their usual celebration and reminds everyone that they will always have each others back. The remark doesnt hold much weight at the time, but as the franchise progresses, it becomes obvious that Dom really meant it.

Betrayal is never on Doms mind, but his team gets a real reason to worry after Cipher seemingly turns him against them in The Fate of the Furious. After he helps Cipher attack his own crew, Letty demands to know whether Dom has decided to go against his own principles.

Thankfully, The Fate of the Furious reveals that Dom is only doing it because Cipher has kidnapped his child. The revelation is proof that Dom will never leave his family behind. Even though his crew worries about him, there is a legitimate reason behind it all, which Dom later proves to them.

Dom is such a great leader because he tends to give his crew members a pass. Vince initially fears that Dom wont let him back in the crew because of his past actions, but Dom assures him that this isnt the case. To Dom, anyone who has contributed in the past will always be valuable.

RELATED: The 9 Most Disliked Fast & Furious Characters

Dom's words emphasize the importance of maintaining bonds. As long as someone is willing to admit their mistakes, he thinks he should always be willing to forgive. Regrettably, Vince later succumbs to gunshot wounds, which he gets while trying to rescue Luke Hobbs.

Luke Hobbs has been a major part of the Fast & Furious franchises success. In Furious 6, he gives the crew yet another reason to reunite when he tasks them with taking down former British SAS member Owen Shaw.

Hobbs knows how much the crew members value each other and has no doubt that they will jump at the opportunity of going on another mission together. He uses this to his advantage in a clever quote, but he also gives them an opportunity and promises them that he will get their previous crimes pardoned.

Dom never gives up on those he loves. As such, when Letty develops amnesia after working with Owen Shaw, he does his best to help her regain her memory. Since she doesn't know what is real and what is not, Dom comes up with a rather straightforward way to help her recall things.

In a moment that highlights both his concern and desperation, Dom tells Letty that anything else she is thinking about is not true. The only real thing in her life is him and her former colleagues, not Shaw and his crew. The remark is a long shot, but it helps bring some of her memories back.

Doms true love has always been Letty. However, the DSS agent, Elena Neves, was a good partner for Dom. Sadly, because of Lettys return, their relationship doesnt stand the test of time. The two cut ties in a heartbreaking scene when Elena points to her badge and declares that her work is her family.

RELATED: 10 Things That Make No Sense About Fast & Furious

While its sad to see Elena go, she makes a good point because she cant dedicate her life to being a member of Doms crew, especially because he is clearly in love with someone else. The only logical thing for her to do is to avoid him and focus on her work.

Each member of Doms crew has a reputation for being a daredevil. Before the mission to retrieve Gods Eye in Furious 7, Mr. Nobody reminds Dom that they need to exercise caution. The covert operative insists that he doesnt want to see any other member of Doms crew get hurt, which Dom takes to heart.

Mr. Nobodys comment about family references the beloved Han, who Deckard Shaw seemingly killed. However, the franchise would later throw in one of the biggest twists by revealing that Han was alive and had plotted with Mr. Nobody to fool everyone into thinking he was dead.

Deckard Shaw overshadowed his younger brother Owen in the Fast & Furious films. However, Owen was one of the best drivers in the Fast & Furious franchise and one of the most courageous characters. Owen met with Dom and threatened him, letting him know what he needs to do to prevent his family from getting harmed.

Dom isnt too impressed, so he reminds him about the golden rule of threats. Anything goes, but when someone threatens another persons family, there is usually no coming back from that. At that point, Owen feels that Doms words are pointless, but he later makes Dom pay.

NEXT: 9 Harsh Realities Of Being A Fast & Furious Fan

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Life in the Fast Lane – New DOE Rule Changes Push LNG Projects … – RBN Energy

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The incredible growth in U.S. LNG export capacity over the past few years has been facilitated by a mostly predictable federal permitting process. It may sometimes be slower than developers like and leave them more open to pushback at the state and local level, but LNG export projects that enter the federal permitting process with both the Department of Energy (DOE) and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) are generally granted their authorizations and export licenses. And once they have them, theyve been able to hold onto them until now. Both FERC and the DOE had been granting extensions to these permits as their authorization windows were closing, meaning that projects that were authorized a decade ago and still not online have retained their authorizations and export licenses. But with a DOE rule change announced April 21, the era of repeatedly renewing authorizations appears to be over. The DOE is sending a clear message to LNG developers: Get your project across the finish line in a timely manner or get out of the way and make space for someone who can. In todays RBN blog, we take a closer look at the DOE rule change and its impact on LNG projects currently under development.

The policy in question here concerns the DOEs export licenses, which typically get a lot less press, public pushback and notice than the FERC environmental review and authorization process. Nonetheless, every project that plans to export U.S. natural gas as LNG meaning not only the projects in the U.S. but any project in Mexico or Canada that plans to source feedgas from the U.S. requires an export license from the DOE. The export licenses come in two varieties, one for Free Trade Agreement (FTA) countries and one for non-Free Trade Agreement (non-FTA) countries. Projects need both licenses to export competitively they are usually granted in that order (FTA first, then non-FTA) and both typically come after a project has already received its FERC authorization. All LNG export licenses contain a clause that essentially says the project has seven years to begin exporting or the license expires. The LNG terminal does not need to reach commercial operations in that seven-year window; the condition is satisfied with the first LNG cargo exported, and commissioning cargoes count.

This time frame was established during permitting for the U.S.s first LNG export facility, Sabine Pass, after some back and forth with Cheniere around a fair and realistic process. (For more on permitting for energy infrastructure, see Dont Pass Me By.) Every U.S. LNG terminal that is currently operational, including the still-commissioning Calcasieu Pass, has met the conditions of that clause without needing an extension, a fact noted by the DOE when it announced its new rule. That includes Calcasieu Pass, which has been able to achieve LNG exports during its seven-year window despite its construction happening during COVID, a reason frequently cited by projects seeking extension requests. In 2020, the DOE granted extensions to three LNG projects: the under-construction Golden Pass as well as pre-FID projects Lake Charles LNG and the Cameron expansion project. Golden Passs original export license would have expired April 25, 2024, and that was pushed back to September 30, 2025; however, Golden Pass is expected to begin commissioning later this year and it might not even need the extra time it was granted. In the policy change, the DOE reaffirmed that seven-year window and said it will no longer consider extensions unless the project is (1) already under construction and (2) can prove extenuating circumstances outside its control. While there are no specifics on what those extenuating circumstances could be, it certainly seems like saying COVID or bad markets isnt going to cut it anymore. If a project isnt eligible for an extension, it has to restart the DOE licensing process and get in line behind all the new projects in the queue.

At the time of this policy change there were four pending extension requests, which would be grandfathered into the old consideration metrics. With the most recent announcement the DOE also ruled on two of those: The under-construction Port Arthur project was granted an extension from May 2, 2026, to June 18, 2028, but Lake Charles LNG was denied a second extension of its authorization window. The projects original non-FTA export license was granted in 2013, but with its previously granted extension it has until December 16, 2025, to begin exporting. The unprecedented second extension request was cited by the DOE as grounds for the denial. Of course, given the project is not under construction it would be impossible to make that window. The project's developer, Energy Transfer, has said it plans to appeal the decision, but if Lake Charles is to move forward it will need to win that appeal or a new export license. The other two extensions still under consideration are for Magnolia LNG and Pierdae LNG in Canada. The DOE will consider these extensions under the previous policy, so they may still be granted. Magnolia has requested a 29-month extension until April 15, 2026, and Pierdae until February 5, 2028. However, neither of these projects are remotely likely to move forward in the near future and subsequent extensions would be subject to the same rule change.

There are currently five LNG projects under construction and on the clock to keep their DOE export license, with four in the U.S. Golden Pass, Plaquemines LNG, Corpus Christi Stage III and Port Arthur LNG along with ECA LNG in Mexico. As we mentioned above, Golden Pass already has an extension, which it may not even need, and Port Arthur was already granted an extension to 2028. As you can see from Figure 1 below, none of these projects is likely to need an extension absent some significant extenuating circumstances. (Remember that the window is satisfied with the first LNG export, which can come well before commercial operations.)

Figure 1. Export Licenses for FID/Under Construction LNG Terminals. Sources: DOE, RBN

The policy shift will be felt most by the projects not yet under construction. Lake Charles is the first project that the DOE did not grant an extension for, but likely not the last, as older projects will soon reach the point where they too will need an extension. Of the potential LNG projects we track in our LNG Voyager Quarterly report, there are 14 that already have their DOE export license but have not yet taken FID (see Figure 2). As we noted earlier, the two projects with the nearest license expiry (Pierdae and Magnolia) were grandfathered in under the old policy review, but the other projects will see their export licenses expire as soon as 2024 and no later than 2028. Construction times for LNG vary greatly depending on the technology being used, whether a project is using large trains (Port Arthur, Golden Pass, etc.), mid-scale modular technology (all the Venture Global projects, Corpus Christi Stage III) or floating LNG (FLNG; Delfin and Altamira).

Figure 2. Export license status for Pre-FID LNG projects. Sources: DOE, RBN

* Projects have extensions currently under review by the DOE under the previous policy.

All of the projects on this list have at least a moderate risk of needing an extension. For the projects whose licenses expire in 2026 or before, with the exception of Cameron Phase 2, that risk is very high considering theyd likely need to be under construction by now to make that window. For the two nearest expiries not currently under review for extension Delfin and MPL they just about certainly will need an extension. The latest estimates from both developers are for 2026 startups, or after their authorizations are set to expire. Starting construction without a valid license would be a huge risk around what the DOE would accept as extenuating circumstances under the new policy, meaning that these projects may decide to reapply for export license and open themselves up to further regulatory scrutiny. That would require them to get in line behind the six LNG projects with export licenses currently under review and other potential projects that have yet to file. Venture Globals Delta LNG as well as Chenieres two newest projects, Corpus Christi 8 & 9 and the Sabine Pass expansion, all have yet to file for export licenses. But thats perhaps the DOEs point, these projects have had their shot and maybe its time for newer, faster, greener projects to get their chance.

Life in the Fast Lane was written by Joe Walsh, Glenn Frey and Don Henley. It appears as the third song on side one of The Eagles fifth studio album, Hotel California. The song was based on a guitar riff from Joe Walsh, with the title idea coming from Glenn Frey after a scary high-speed drive with an associate on a freeway in Los Angeles. Frey and Don Henley collaborated on the lyrics. Life in the Fast Lane was the third single from Hotel California, released in May 1977. It went to #11 on the Billboard Hot 100 Singles chart. Personnel on the record were: Don Henley (lead vocals, drums), Joe Walsh (lead guitar, rhythm guitar), Glenn Frey (Clavinet, backing vocals), Don Felder (lead guitar, rhythm guitar) and Randy Meisner (bass, backing vocals).

Hotel California was recorded between March and October 1976 at Criteria Studios in Miami and Record Plant Studios in Los Angeles, with Bill Szymczyk producing. Released in December 1976, the album went to #1 on the Billboard Top 200 Albums chart. It has been certified 26x Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.

The Eagles are an American rock band formed in Los Angeles in 1971. They have released seven studio albums, two live albums, 10 compilation albums and 32 singles. The band has won five American Music Awards and six Grammy Awards and is a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Vocal Group Hall of Fame. In 2016, The Eagles were recipients of Kennedy Center Honors. Nine members have passed through the ranks of The Eagles since its formation, with Don Henley being the only original member still in the band. Founding member Glenn Frey passed away in 2016. The band still records and tours and recently completed its Hotel California tour.

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