The gloves are off: Albo launches scorched earth attack on Pauline Hanson - and exposes why he is against EVERYTHING she stands for
Anthony Albanese has unleashed against Pauline Hanson, in his more fiery statement yet about the One Nation leader.

"GLOVES" · 총 23건
필터 보기현재 지수
49.4
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 84,138건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 49.4(균형)입니다. 긍정 10,371건(12.3%)·중립 60,613건(72.0%)·부정 13,154건(15.6%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 21.3(보수 경향)입니다.
Anthony Albanese has unleashed against Pauline Hanson, in his more fiery statement yet about the One Nation leader.

Goh Chok Siang is accused of acquiring 150,000 shares in the knowledge that the company would venture into the manufacture and sale of gloves.

Dads who golf can be surprisingly difficult to shop for. There are clubs, rangefinders, golf balls, gloves, even ball markers — and unless you spend your weekends on the course, it can be tough to know what’s actually worth gifting. The jargon alone can feel like trying to decipher a scorecard. Fortunately, golfers tend to […]
Shrunken suits, bouncy wigs and gloves that came with a manicure were some of the looks that stood out on the red carpet.
We must now ask: what kind of reductionist ambition will make Goodluck Jonathan bring down his political gloves from the rafters and enter the ring against, for example, a former protégé like Senator Seriake Dickson, the national leader of Obi’s party, the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC)? If Dr Goodluck Jonathan were my brother, I would […] The post Should Jonathan run (away)?, By Wole Olaoye appeared first on Premium Times Nigeria.
Two teens fought in boxing gloves, as the large crowd of onlookers drew a heavy police response.
The conservancy worker was reportedly made to clean human waste without gloves and mask at a public toilet near Tiruppur Kumaran Bus Stand in the 60th ward
The 32-year-old wicketkeeper-batter from Visakhapatnam, who played seven Tests for India, announces his retirement on social media
Shortage affecting bakeries to convenience store chains, and making everyday items more expensive for people
The Middle East is Japan’s main source of crude oil, from which naphtha is extracted and used to make items including printing ink and plastics Takeaways, supermarkets, and bakeries in Japan are running out of plastic bags, trays and food service gloves amid widening shortages of the key plastic ingredient, naphtha, due to the Middle East crisis. The food sector accounts for nearly one-third of Japan’s annual plastic use of more than 8m tonnes, and price rises and shortages are hitting hard across the industry and beyond. Some outlets have begun offering perks to customers who bring their own bags, plates or containers. Continue reading...
The state of Florida is taking off the kid gloves and slapping artificial intelligence kingpin OpenAI with a monster lawsuit. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier filed an 83-page civil suit on Monday against OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman. Florida charges OpenAI with building an unregulated “wealth machine” that pushes a highly addictive, dangerous product directly ...
A masked-up weirdo decked out in camouflage and pictured ranting into a microphone with a portable PA system has repeatedly vandalized the Polish consulate in Manhattan, police said. Cops released pictures of the fashion-victim vandal wearing gloves, saying he first tagged the 125-year-old De Lamar Mansion in Murray Hill that houses the consulate on Wednesday...
Dutch hospitals are confronting increasing shortages of medical devices, ranging from basic supplies, such as surgical gloves, to highly specialized components used in complex surgeries and MRI sca
KARACHI: With Eidul Azha just round the corner, health experts have raised concerns over the increasing risk for zoonotic disease transmission and environmental pollution during the festive occasion. They urged citizens to ensure handling and slaughtering of sacrificial animals with adequate hygiene and veterinary precautions to minimise risk of Congo Crimean Haemorrhagic Fever (CCHF) — a viral disease that has a fatality rate of up to 40 per cent. There is no vaccine available for either animals or humans. “Recent health data shows an upward trajectory, with cases surfacing in dense urban centres. The upcoming festival multiplies exposure opportunities for livestock handlers, butchers and the general public, threatening to strain our healthcare infrastructure if left unchecked,” said Dr Abdul Ghafoor Shoro representing the Pakistan Medical Association (PMA). He stressed the need for activating high-containment isolation wards across major public and private hospitals and ensuring an uninterrupted supply of personal protective equipment for medical staff, alongside rapid diagnostic testing capabilities. Citizens advised to adopt precautions while livestock handling and slaughtering “District authorities should mandate basic safety protocols and protective gear usage for professional butchers operating during the festival,” he said. In a statement, the association urged the public to prioritise safety over convenience by adopting simple precautions during livestock handling and slaughtering. It says: “Apply insect repellents containing DEET (N,N-Diethyl-meta-toluamide) on exposed skin and clothing. Carefully check livestock for ticks around the ears, neck and soft skin areas. For livestock bought early, consult a veterinarian to apply safe anti-tick treatments. “Wear light-coloured, long-sleeved shirts and trousers so that ticks can be easily spotted. Do not wear open shoes or sandals; use closed footwear with socks. “Never crush a tick with bare hands, as the fluids are highly infectious. Use tweezers or gloves to remove them safely,” the association stated. During sacrificial slaughtering, wear gloves, masks and protective aprons. Avoid direct contact with animal blood and fluids. Properly bury or dispose of animal waste and offal immediately, and wash all knives and surfaces with a chlorine bleach solution, it adds. According to experts, Congo virus is primarily transmitted to humans through the bite of infected “Hyalomma ticks” found on livestock, or through direct contact with the blood, secretions, or tissues of infected animals during or immediately after slaughter. Human-to-human transmission can also occur in household or healthcare settings due to direct contact with infected bodily fluids. “Early symptoms of Congo virus mimic other endemic diseases like dengue or severe malaria. Onset is sudden, featuring high fever, severe muscle aches, dizziness, neck pain, and vomiting,” Dr Shoro explained, adding that if these symptoms appear alongside a history of livestock exposure, the individual needs immediate and emergency medical care. At a seminar held at Karachi University’s Dr Panjwani Center for Molecular Medicine and Drug Research (PCMD), Dr Saman Nadeem, consultant clinical microbiologist and section head of microbiology at the National Medical Centre, said preventive measures during this Eid reduced the risk of zoonotic disease transmission. These precautions included purchasing healthy animals, ensuring veterinary examination, maintaining personal hygiene, using designated slaughter areas, safely disposing of animal waste, and avoiding direct contact with animal fluids. Food-borne illnesses, she pointed out, were common during this Eid and investigations revealed repeated thawing and reheating of stored meat over several days as a factor contributing to these illnesses. Published in Dawn, May 26th, 2026
AN entire genre of absurdist literature exists, wrapped in poetry and nursery rhymes, which has regaled the world for centuries. Occasionally, the humour and satire they spawn assume the form of an inscrutable poker-faced dilettante relishing a faux involvement in the morose world of politics. Take the Quad foreign ministers under the dilettante’s watch. They plan to meet in Delhi on Tuesday (today) as part of America’s long-expired Obama-era ‘pivot to the east’ policy. The idea was to somehow trap China, preferably in the Strait of Malacca, to impair its stride as an economic power and as an equal challenger to the US. Penny Wong, Toshimitsu Motegi and Marco Rubio are to confabulate in Delhi as guests of Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, ostensibly to keep the Indo-Pacific sea-lanes free. Free from whom? Free from themselves, it turns out. The inscrutable dilettante would studiously refuse to call out the flawed meet. He might prefer instead to layer the humour with irony. The silent observer is only too aware that Quad discussants have displayed a marked failure individually and collectively to prise open the Strait of Hormuz in all of 86 days so far. Ergo: they have struggled against an unseeded Iran, which has stood up like Horatius to thwart an invader at the bridge. In this way, Iran snapped shut the vital economic artery to stall Donald Trump’s Exceptionalist-Zionist war. And the Quad, led by the same US, would take on China, a China which is not known to harbour any desire to interdict or be interdicted on any trade route, land, sea or air. A Quad-like situation is likely to have created the kindergarten expression: ‘And the dish ran away with the spoon.’ The irony doesn’t end with Hormuz. Donald Trump had only recently enjoyed the spectacular hospitality of Xi Jinping, an exclusively Chinese fare of lavish opulence masking, under the velvet gloves, a hardball reserved for the most unyielding of rivals. And so, Trump craves China’s help instead as never before in crucial arenas of trade and politics. And Rubio, the leader of the Quad discussants in Delhi, knows only too well how his president has emasculated the American project to contain Beijing. It’s in a way sad for Jaishankar — sad too that he must keep up the appearance of representing a sovereign and upright India. He told Rubio at a press meet that just as it was America’s right to imagine an America-first future, India too followed the policy of India-first. Really? Hard to believe. After being treated as a yo-yo by Trump? It’s for this that India has kept its distance from Iran to the point of being callous about Iran’s searing human tragedies. And it embraces Israel, whose future as an oversold democratic state looks bleak. Since India cannot respond to China the way it does to South Asian irritants, it answers the description of a short-sighted bully. Japan in the Quad remains Beijing’s biggest trade partner, with China critically importing more than it sells. Bilateral ties have hit turbulence, but a safe landing is a given. Australia sees China as the largest trading partner, but also fears being singed by the pyromaniac ally in the basement. The Quad, as they say, is dead in the water, while the pivot to the east is in disarray. Besides, neither America nor Israel proved to be worthy defence partners for anyone, least of all their Gulf clients, given their humiliating battle with a militarily and diplomatically rejuvenated Iran. This is another way of saying it’s perhaps time to see a reset of attitudes and relationships right across the world, and India is no exception. There’s a lot to salvage in the neighbourhood, including its sullied reputation as a democracy. Start with China and Pakistan. I believe that a call by the RSS general secretary Dattatreya Hosabale for India to resume diplomatic ties and people-to-people contacts and to revive trade with Pakistan may be absurd and sensible in equal measure. It’s absurd that the advice has come from an avowedly Muslim-hating and Pakistan-baiting organisation. But since the RSS is taking a stand for peace, being presumably aware of which side the bread is buttered and knowing that its blind pro-Americanism has become an investment of diminishing returns, it goes without saying that it would be brilliant if peace could return to South Asia. It’s been 10 years since India blocked the Saarc summit that was due to be held in Islamabad in 2016. In these years, anti-India sentiment has grown in the neighbourhood, and it has nothing to do with India being a predominantly Hindu country with Muslim allergens in the vicinity. How would it explain its unpopularity in a resurgent Hindu Nepal and utterly cordial relations with the narrow-minded Muslim rulers in Afghanistan? Recently, Chinese officials let it be known publicly that they had helped Pakistan in responding robustly to India’s Operation Sindoor. Shouldn’t visa restrictions be applied to China and bilateral relations put in a deep freeze? China, after all, helped Pakistan against India. However, since India cannot respond to China the way it does to South Asian irritants, it answers the description of a short-sighted bully. Some more proof, if any is needed. “We have received a directive that there cannot be China-bashing,” movie producer Himalay Dassani says, explaining why he shelved his war film on the 2020 Galwan stand-off with China. “If we are not going to get clearance from the defence ministry, there will be no point in telling the story of the Galwan battle as we can’t show the correct angle. If the fight and the reasons behind the clash are non-existent, what is the use of making a movie on it?” The absurdity goes to the other extreme when ham-handed movies with hateful messaging against Pakistan are granted official patronage. Lewis Carroll, the undisputed master of literary nonsense, has a famous absurdist saying in the White Queen’s declaration to Alice: “Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.” The writer is Dawn’s correspondent in Delhi. jawednaqvi@gmail.com Published in Dawn, May 26th, 2026
The Russian football player previously sparred a few times with UFC heavyweight fighter Alexander Volkov
Jona Rechnitz -- who once tried to bribe NYPD cops with hookers -- orchestrated "a multi-year fraudulent scheme" involving Mayweather's real estate, jewelry and beloved Gulfstream Jet famously emblazoned with “MAYWEATHER” on the fuselage, according to a new lawsuit.
Exclusive Details: ‘As they say, the gloves are off,’ Mayweather’s attorney Leo Jacobs told The Independent of his client’s allegations against Jona Rechnitz
Exclusive Details: ‘As they say, the gloves are off,’ Mayweather’s attorney Leo Jacobs told The Independent of his client’s allegations against Jona Rechnitz
OVO Hydro, Glasgow Moving seamlessly through extravagant choreography between bubblegum–rap and darker, rockier material, the singer is always in full command Since her breakout almost a decade ago, singer and rapper Doja Cat has been musically restless: bouncing between the pop-rap of her first album Amala to her darker, toothier 2023 release Scarlet; collaborating with SZA then heel-turning to cover Hole. On last year’s fifth album Vie she negotiated the tension between the pop persona she once denounced as a “cash grab” and her true freak artistic self – a tension she plays to perfection during tonight’s show. After a prelude where Doja hovers above the stage in Klaus Nomi-esque shoulder pads and a 20-metre long train – perhaps elaborate trolling aimed at fans who complained about her lack of outfit changes earlier in the tour – she arrives fully formed as a purple-clad bandleader for a run of 80s inflected tracks from Vie and 2021’s Planet Her. Fronting a 10-person band, she’s an immediately commanding presence, wearing pasties, a high-waisted bodysuit, tights and gloves, her zebra print microphone matching her heels. She has the look of a scene-kid Prince, the blond of recent shows swapped for an acid green wig. Appropriately, the synergy between her and her band is reminiscent of Purple Rain, or a glam-rock Stop Making Sense. She moves seamlessly between modes and poses, from slow jam Make It Up – more muscular live than on record – to the swagger of Ain’t Shit and Paint the Town Red. Continue reading...