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The class politics of modern outbreaks | Health

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No one can stop the wealthy from taking their holidays. Whether coasting down snowy mountains or rubbing shoulders with fellow elites on luxury cruises, they will always find a way to indulge in leisure and excess, sometimes even on the cusp of an outbreak.

In January 2020, a German tourist vacationing in the Canary Islands tested positive for the novel coronavirus, becoming Spain’s first confirmed COVID-19 case. The patient, along with five other German nationals travelling with him, was placed under observation. Authorities later discovered that the tourist had been in contact, in Germany, with a Chinese businesswoman infected with COVID-19 before travelling to the archipelago. The episode foreshadowed a pattern that would define the pandemic: Pathogens moved quickly along the same routes as wealthy tourists, business travellers, and international elites.

During the early months of COVID-19, the virus was frequently associated with affluent mobility. Early outbreaks were linked to ski holidays, business trips to Wuhan, and luxury cruises that served as vectors of disease transmission. As Bjorn Thor Arnarson wrote in Scientific Reports, “human transportation was needed to distribute the virus to new places.” Those moving most freely across borders were overwhelmingly affluent.

This dynamic produced strange public perceptions. In Mexico, Governor Luis Miguel Barbosa notoriously declared: “If you’re rich, you’re at risk, but if you’re poor, you’re not. The poor, we’re immune.” His comments were absurd, but they reflected a real phenomenon unfolding at the time. A number of Mexico’s wealthiest bankers had returned from a ski trip in Vail, Colorado, carrying the virus with them. When public health officials attempted to contact several members of the group about possible exposure, many reportedly failed to respond.

Yet diseases associated with elite mobility rarely remain confined to elites. Public health officials quickly encountered a familiar paradox: While affluent travellers often accelerate the international spread of disease, it is usually poorer populations who suffer most once outbreaks become entrenched. During COVID-19, wealthier families fled to second homes, worked remotely, and insulated themselves from exposure, while working-class populations continued labouring in crowded cities, factories, and public transport systems. The wealthy carried the virus across borders, but the poor absorbed much of the risk.

In this sense, pandemics often mirror the inequalities of globalisation itself: Those with the greatest freedom of movement generate disproportionate epidemiological risk, while those with the fewest resources are left most exposed to its consequences.

Class has long shaped not only vulnerability to disease, but also the social narratives built around epidemics. Tuberculosis was once romanticised as a disease of artists and intellectuals, partly because writers and painters documented their experiences with it. By contrast, diseases such as Ebola and HIV/AIDS became heavily associated with poverty. Still, the role of elite mobility in spreading infectious disease remains significant in an increasingly globalised world. The same tensions between wealth, mobility, and vulnerability resurfaced during the recent hantavirus scare on board the MV Hondius.

When the MV Hondius departed Ushuaia, Argentina, on April 1, its passengers embarked on a luxury voyage towards Cape Verde. The ship was carrying 88 passengers and 59 crew members from 23 countries. Some reportedly paid up to 18,000 euros ($21,000) for the journey. Few could have imagined they would become the centre of an emerging hantavirus outbreak that has since been linked to seven confirmed cases, two suspected cases and three deaths.

As the ship approached the Canary Islands in May, Spanish authorities initially refused to allow it to dock. After protests from passengers and their families, a compromise was reached permitting the vessel to remain offshore near Tenerife. Fernando Clavijo, president of the Canary Islands, defended the decision by warning that infected rodents on board the ship could potentially reach land and spread the disease. Spanish health officials later downplayed that possibility, but the episode revealed a broader anxiety: Wealthy travellers may introduce pathogens into regions where local populations ultimately bear the consequences.

The COVID-19 pandemic transformed how many people view elite travel itself. Long before the pandemic, affluent tourism was criticised for its carbon footprint and environmental impact. COVID-19 added another dimension: The microbial consequences of unrestricted global mobility. The effects are rarely distributed equally. Poorer populations, particularly in the Global South, remain more vulnerable to outbreaks because of overcrowding, weaker healthcare systems, water shortages, and climate pressures that intensify the spread of disease.

This raises an uncomfortable political question: Should wealthy societies bear greater responsibility for the epidemiological risks generated by elite mobility?

Emerging infectious diseases can escalate rapidly into international crises, destabilising economies and costing countless lives. The outbreak on board the MV Hondius was not simply an isolated maritime incident, but a reminder of how deeply inequality shapes global health itself. Even during moments of quarantine and emergency, mobility remains stratified. Wealthy passengers returned home to medical monitoring and treatment, while the regions exposed to potential outbreaks were left to manage the uncertainty and risk.

The story of the MV Hondius ultimately reveals a familiar reality of globalisation: The privileged remain the most mobile people on earth, but rarely the most exposed to the consequences of that mobility.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.



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Ronda Rousey reveals what inspired her return to MMA after nearly 10 years


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This Saturday will mark the end of Ronda Rousey’s nine-plus-year hiatus from mixed martial arts, and if all goes as planned, it will mark her farewell.

The 39-year-old is perhaps the greatest female MMA star of all time, and she’s giving fans one more show as she will face fellow legendary fighter Gina Carano at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California, with the help of Jake Paul’s Most Valuable Promotions.

“Yeah, I’m excited. It’s finally, like, super real,” Rousey told Fox News Digital. “At first, we were training in secret for, like, a year. It was really more like a year and a half at this point, but at least over a year. And now it’s kind of really bittersweet that it’s coming to an end. I’ve been having such a great time. This camp has been one of the most incredible experiences of my life.”

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Ronda Rousey celebrating victory inside Mandalay Bay Events Center

UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey celebrates her victory over Alexis Davis at UFC 175 inside the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, Nev., on July 5, 2014. (Donald Miralle/Zuffa LLC)

Rousey, the first woman signed by the UFC who became a Hall of Famer in 2018, retired in 2016 after six successful UFC Women’s Bantamweight Championship defenses before entering WWE full-time. Rousey’s MMA record got off to a 12-0 start before she lost her final two bouts to Holly Holm and Amanda Nunes, respectively, and nine of Rousey’s 12 victories came within the first 70 seconds. All but one victory was in the first round.

It’s no secret that Rousey is out of her prime, but this camp “hasn’t felt like a grind at all.”

“We made joy a priority — actually enjoying the process instead of just hoping enjoyment would come along the way,” Rousey said. “Before, everything was so result-oriented. Now, it’s about the process. And once we made that shift, ‘Let’s make this as fun as possible,’ I started getting better results than ever. I feel better than I ever have, physically and mentally.”

“I used to be very much in that old-school mentality of, you have to suffer and make yourself miserable in order to be the best you can be. And now it’s like, no, I realize it doesn’t have to be that. I can enjoy this as much as possible, and it makes me the best that I can be. Because I already know that I’m a bada–. I already know that I can dig deep. I’ve already paid all those dues, I’ve done all of those things. So I think just making it fun… good vibes only, it’s all about me, there’s none of this other stuff going on around me, no superfluous noise.”

So, why come back in the first place?

Ronda Rousey and Gina Carano posing together at a press conference.

Ronda Rousey and Gina Carano pose after the press conference for the Most Valuable Promotions MMA card at the Palladium Theater in New York on April 15, 2026. (Ed Mulholland/Imagn Images)

RONDA ROUSEY RETURNING TO FIGHTING AFTER NEARLY 10-YEAR HIATUS: ‘THIS IS FOR ALL MMA FANS’

“Gina, that’s the reason,” she said.

“I was sitting nine months pregnant, about to pop, in an office chair. I saw her at a low point, losing her bodily identity and being really unhealthy. And after seeing Mike Tyson come back at nearly (age) 60 and be the most-viewed combat sports event of all time, I knew there was a huge demand out there and that these showcase fights were the future of combat sports.

“When I saw where Gina was at, and I looked down at my big belly, where I was at, I was like, ‘You know what? A fight between us would be huge not just for the world, but for each other.’ And I think this is what combat sports needs. This is what we need. And just like she inspired me to do MMA in the first place, she’s the one who inspired me to come back.”

Rousey said she “promised my husband and swore up and down to my sister” that this is her final fight. Knowing it’s a farewell after nearly a decade out, all of the emotions are in play.

“That fluttering in the chest, that nervousness, I know that’s what happens when I’m about to do great things. I don’t become afraid of my own anxiety or my own fear, in a way. I wouldn’t even label it like that. I’m not afraid of how my body reacts to those things, because I know that’s what it does before I do something great. I perform above myself when I’m under a huge amount of pressure. So when I feel those symptoms of that pressure, I don’t shy away from it and get scared of it.

“It’s more like the launch sequence before the rocket blasts off.”

As much fun Rousey has had, there is still a goal – winning. Admittedly, “if there’s anyone on this earth who I would be okay with taking my happiness and running around with it, it’s Gina,” Rousey said.

“Because she’s the only person in women’s MMA that doesn’t owe me a damn thing—and that I owe immensely,” she added. “And if this is the only way that I can give back to her—to give her the comeback story of a lifetime—I owe everything, all the prosperity in my life, to her. If that’s the way that it has to go, then that’s the way that it has to go.”

But it won’t be easy.

UFC women's bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey interacting with crowd at press conference

UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey interacts with the crowd during the UFC Time Is Now press conference at The Smith Center for the Performing Arts in Las Vegas, Nev., on Nov. 17, 2014. (Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images)

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“She’s going to have to pry victory from my cold, dead fingers. Because I want to show her the monster that she created. And I want her to be proud of me,” Rousey said.

“I want me beating the s— out of her to actually be the greatest compliment I could ever pay her.”

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1MDB financier Jho Low seeks pardon from Donald Trump | 1MDB

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The fugitive Malaysian financier Jho Low, a central figure in the multibillion-dollar scandal at the state fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), is reportedly seeking a pardon from the US president, Donald Trump.

Low faces multiple charges including corruption and money laundering in the US and Malaysia for the important role he allegedly played in the misappropriation of at least $4.5bn (£3.3bn) from 1MDB.

The scandal was one of the world’s biggest financial frauds, with billions plundered from the now defunct sovereign wealth fund in a scandal that began to unfold in 2015.

Low has consistently denied wrongdoing and his whereabouts is unknown.

Low recently filed a request for a pardon that, if granted, would remove US criminal charges against him, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter.

A White House official said Low’s request was not on its radar, the report said.

The US Justice Department website lists a pending request for a “pardon after completion of sentence” under Taek Jho Low that was filed this year.

Johari Abdul Ghani, the chair of a Malaysian taskforce seeking to recover funds and assets linked to 1MDB worldwide, said Low’s request should be denied and the US should instead assist Malaysia in locating him for further investigations.

“As far as I’m concerned, I’m against the pardon,” said Johari, who is also the trade minister.

Johari said he was unaware of any talks between Low and Malaysia to return assets.

The WSJ reported that Malaysia had temporarily lifted an Interpol red notice against Low that would make him subject to arrest almost anywhere in the world to facilitate the return of significant assets to the country.

In 2019, the US struck a deal to recoup about $1bn from Low, with the fugitive agreeing to give up a private jet and high-end real estate in Beverly Hills, New York and London among other assets.

The Malaysian prime minister, Anwar Ibrahim, said in 2023 that the government was negotiating with other countries to speed up Low’s return, although he declined to name the nations involved.

Authorities have previously said Low was believed to be in China, although Beijing has denied it.



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Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos says no bid on full NFL season rights


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Streaming giant Netflix’s push into live sports has ranged from the WWE and Formula 1 to select MLB and NFL games.

While the initiative has drawn some criticism, Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos said the strategy is not aimed at securing full-season rights packages for any sports league.”

“We’re not bidding on whole season of sports, including the NFL,” Sarandos told Fox Business Network’s “Mornings with Maria” on Tuesday. So far, Sarandos’ comments have held true with Netflix prioritizing marquee events, including Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson and the New York Yankees’ opening-day shutout of the San Fransisco Giants.

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Netflix logo displayed on building in Hollywood Los Angeles

The Netflix logo is displayed on a building in the Hollywood neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, on Dec. 2, 2025. (Mike Blake/Reuters)

Sarandos holding a firm line on the company’s stance comes amid ongoing federal scrutiny into NFL, and more broadly, the trend of sports rights growing more fragmented. Some have argued the trend makes its most costly and ultimately difficult for fans to view games.

NFL FACES JUSTICE DEPARTMENT PROBE AFTER FANS EXPRESS FRUSTRATION WITH STREAMING PIVOT: REPORT

However, federal scrutiny into sports fragmentation has brought the topic of live sports on streaming services to the forefront.

“Remember, most folks are paying for television through pay-television packages that are much more expensive than Netflix,” Sarandos said, suggesting that despite being technically free, broadcast networks are most often bundled within paid services.

Ted Sarandos speaking at Netflix Studios Fort Monmouth groundbreaking in Eatontown, New Jersey

Ted Sarandos, CEO of Netflix, speaks during the Netflix Studios Fort Monmouth groundbreaking in Eatontown, New Jersey, on May 13, 2025. (Tanya Breen/Asbury Park Press / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

As of May, Netflix’s introductory ad-supported tier starts at $8.99 per month. The standard plan begins at $19.99 per month, while the premium tier starts at $26.99 per month. Prices can increase if subscribers add additional members. The basic plan has been discontinued.

“As viewers move a little bit from linear more and more into streaming and on-demand, if the games aren’t there, it seems kind of ridiculous. You don’t run in the opposite direction of the American consumer,” Sarandos continued.

This fall, Netflix will once again have an exclusive window for a Christmas Day NFL doubleheader while expanding its overall footprint to five games during the 2026 season. The league’s first-ever game in Australia in Week 1 will stream exclusively on Netflix, while a Thanksgiving Eve matchup will also be included in the California-based company’s expanded NFL rights package.

Netflix and NFL signage advertising Christmas Day games

Netflix and NFL signage advertises the NFL’s two Christmas Day marquee games streaming live on Netflix in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Dec. 1, 2024. (Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images)

“This is something that is great for the consumer because it gives an inexpensive, very affordable way to watch sports, and television, and movies, and kids programming, and podcasts, and play games. All those things for $8.99 is an amazing proposition for consumers,” Sarandos said, addressing regulatory scrutiny of sports streaming rights and whether exemptions should apply when non-linear platforms acquire a share of a league’s inventory.

“It’s great for the leagues that they have an active competitive base of folks bidding for those games, so that’s valuable. I think it’s an important part to the American success story of the economy, is that you can lean into it and be competitive, and you have to deliver.”

Amid concerns that only a select number of tech companies could wind up controlling premium entertainment, Sarandos pushed back, arguing, Sarandos countered, arguing, “I’d say people probably said the same thing when pay-television, which most people are probably watching this show on right now, came in and took the place of TV over the antenna. This is kind of a natural evolution of technology and consumer demand.”

Fox News poll in March indicated that 72% of sports fans think major sporting events should stay free on broadcast TV, amid reports that the NFL is considering allowing teams to sell the rights to preseason games to streaming services.

NFL fans who want access to every game need to purchase YouTube TV for “NFL Sunday Ticket,” in addition to the costly subscriptions for all the streaming services the NFL broadcasts on.

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Those streaming services are Amazon Prime, Peacock and Netflix. The combination of those respective services is over $1,500 a year, and that doesn’t include the fees that come with basic cable packages or high-speed Wi-Fi that is needed to accommodate the platforms.

Front Office Sports reported the annual NFL Honors ceremony, which takes place in the days leading up to the Super Bowl in the host city, is expected to move to Netflix beginning in February. The 2027 Super Bowl is scheduled to kick off on Feb. 14 from SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California.

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Stella prize 2026: Lee Lai becomes first non-binary person and first graphic novelist to win with Cannon | Stella prize

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As the 2026 winner of the Stella prize, Lee Lai has established two new firsts: the first ever non-binary winner with her book Cannon, which is the first graphic novel to win the $60,000 Australian literary award for women and non-binary writers.

Cannon follows the titular, queer Chinese woman living in Montreal on the “uncool side of [her] twenties”. Cannon’s real name is Lucy, which became Luce then (loose) Cannon – and much like her unwanted nickname, she shoulders responsibility without complaint. During the day she cares for her gung-gung (maternal grandfather), a former tyrant enfeebled by age, without any help from her emotionally avoidant mother; and by night she works in the kitchen of a fine-dining restaurant, corralling chaos into order. Cannon’s longtime best friend Trish uses her as a soundboard for all of her problems, and is secretly mining Cannon’s life as a troubling source of inspiration for her writing career.

The cover of Cannon by Lee Lai. Photograph: Girmondo Publishing

Speaking to Guardian Australia before her win was announced at a ceremony in Brisbane on Wednesday night, Lai says, “It’s been a challenge to keep it secret, especially with many wonderfully nosy friends.”

The Stella prize was first opened to non-binary writers in 2021. Lai, who was born in Melbourne and is now based in Montreal, was first nominated for the Stella in 2023 for her debut Stone Fruit, which won the Lambda Literary award for LGBTQ comics, the Cartoonist Studio prize, the Lynd Ward Graphic Novel prize and two Ignatz awards.

Being the first graphic novelist to win the Stella is “pretty cool”, she says, adding: “I hope that this is a win for the comics community as well, and that it makes some readers more interested in reading comics.”

As for the impact of $60,000 on her life? “Ultimately, money is time. None of us have a lot of that. This money will let me go for a very long time.”

Generally, she says, the graphic novelist community “doesn’t have a lot of money. We joke that we are endlessly doing fundraisers and passing around the same $20 bill. In my world, this is a lot.”

A page from Cannon, which the Stella judges praised as ‘absolutely one of the best graphic novels’. Illustration: Lee Lai/Giramondo

The Stella judges have praised Cannon as “a bruising examination of the lifelong weight that people – often women – carry, the profound toll it takes to be the ‘responsible one’, and what can happen when you are being taken advantage of repeatedly. (Bonus: it is also, somehow, very funny.)

“Lai’s elegant artistry evokes horror and poignancy, shock and delight, and Cannon is an incontestable reminder that – in the hands of a masterful artist and storyteller – the very best graphic novels can do what prose alone cannot. And Cannon is absolutely one of the best.”

Lai began writing Cannon in 2019, working on it on and off for years while “paying the bills with the comics-related or illustration gigs I could take”. She found herself rewriting it as her world changed. “At the start, it was very fun to have an objective of taking a long-term friendship and grinding it down,” Lai says. “Then the pandemic happened and we couldn’t see our friends and everyone’s friendships were feeling a lot more fragile and it was no longer fun to do that. So I ended up writing a lot more optimistic outcome for Cannon and Trish than I originally planned.”

Impactful pops of red are used to signal Cannon’s rising rage and sense of overwhelm. Illustration: Lee Lai/Giramondo

Cannon is a story about failures of communication and an exercise in showing, not telling: from a quick glance, Lai’s positioning of speech bubbles tells the reader if a character is being interrupted or ignored, if they are pensive or frustrated. It is mostly monochrome, with impactful pops of colour, and the pages are almost entirely four grid.

It is a restrictive way to work, which Lai enjoys. “If you create expectation [in the reader], when you break it, it’s impactful. You can control the reader’s pacing – you can tell them when to halt, when to pause, when to speed up. I’m manipulating a reader to get lost in the story a bit and then, with a single page turn, I screech the brakes.”

Cannon, who is stoic to a fault, is “some really extreme exaggerations of some of the ways I am”, Lai says. Cannon’s best friend Trish, meanwhile, is the embodiment of Lai’s “anxieties and cynicisms about neoliberal diversity discourse in the cultural sector”; Trish is writing a novel heavily based on Cannon’s life without her knowledge, but frets more about whether she is a “fucking cliche” for writing a gay-immigrant novel that will likely be attractive to white funding boards than the ethics of swiping her friend’s story.

“These are the sort of things that you think about [as a writer],” Lai says. “I wanted the reader to feel as uncomfortable as I do around those questions.”

Trish discusses her novel, which is heavily based on Cannon’s life, with her older white mentor Joyce. Photograph: PR

Lai cites graphic novelists Marjane Satrapi (Persepolis), Craig Thompson (Blankets), Daniel Clowes (Ghost World), Chris Ware (Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth), Chester Brown (Louis Riel) and cousins Mariko and Jillian Tamaki (Skim) as influences whose work had helped to make “graphic novels be recognised as a legitimate form of literature”.

“Like everybody, my understanding of comics was once superheroes and Peanuts,” she says. “And then I read Skim and Ghost World and saw that, actually, something else is possible here.”

The term graphic novel is sometimes disputed by those who dismiss it as a pretentious marketing term to make comics more palatable to adult readers. Asked for her opinion, Lai laughs: “There is an irreverence around the term ‘comic’ that I like and there is something snooty about ‘graphic novel’ that I try to stay away from. There’s a distancing from comics’ heritage – I’m like, ‘Our heritage is Peanuts! Accept it.’”



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Sage Steele questions Lane Kiffin’s timing after he links Ole Miss recruiting to segregation concerns


Lane Kiffin is no stranger to stirring controversy. 

The former Ole Miss head coach drew attention again this week after floating a theory about diversity efforts that he claimed at times hindered his ability to recruit players during his tenure at Oxford.

In excerpts taken from a wide-ranging interview with Vanity Fair, Kiffin noted that some recruits would tell him, “‘Hey, coach, we really like you. But my grandparents aren’t letting me move to Oxford, Mississippi.’

“That doesn’t come up when you say Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Parents were sitting here this weekend saying the campus’ diversity feels so great: ‘It feels like there’s no segregation. And we want that for our kid because that’s the real world.’”

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Head coach Lane Kiffin speaking at LSU Football Practice Facility in Baton Rouge

Head coach Lane Kiffin of the LSU Tigers speaks during a press conference at the LSU Football Practice Facility in Baton Rouge, La., on Feb. 4, 2026. (Gus Stark/LSU/University Images)

Kiffin said he does not expect to face similar challenges in his new home, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, saying, “That doesn’t come up when you say Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Parents were sitting here this weekend saying the campus’ diversity feels so great: ‘It feels like there’s no segregation. And we want that for our kid because that’s the real world.’”

Kiffin did not directly point to inherent challenges to diversity at Ole Miss, nor did he frame the school as uniquely racist in the article. He did, however, suggest he believes its history still shapes national perception.

OLE MISS PLAYERS PUSH BACK ON LANE KIFFIN’S CLAIM THAT TEAM ASKED AD TO LET HIM FINISH SEASON WITH REBELS

Former ESPN host Sage Steele was a guest on the “Will Cain Country” podcast, hosted by Fox News Channel’s “The Will Cain Show” host Will Cain, on Tuesday and weighed in on the LSU coach’s comments. Cain admitted he had never traveled to Oxford, while Steele spoke about her ties to the campus.

“I have not seen the Confederate flags there, it that doesn’t mean that it’s not there. But I have not seen it. My daughter is a sophomore at Ole Miss.”

Sage Steele talking on set during NBA Finals game at Oracle Arena in Oakland

Then-ESPN anchor Sage Steele talks on set during Game Four of the NBA Finals between the Toronto Raptors and Golden State Warriors at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California, on June 7, 2019. (Rey Josue II/NBAE via Getty Images)

Steele questioned the timing of Kiffin’s remarks, suggesting he raised concerns only after leaving Ole Miss.

“I just think it’s really fascinating that now he says that,” she said. But, you were fine in Oxford all those years. You were fine in Oxford leading into last football season, saying ‘It is just so much more than football.’ …. it’s how the community has embraced him and his family. And he’s come such a long way personally. …And then all of a sudden, they hold your feet to the fire, and no, you can’t coach the college football playoff after deciding to leave.”

Lane Kiffin standing on the sidelines at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Mississippi

Lane Kiffin of the Mississippi Rebels looks on before the game against the South Carolina Gamecocks at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss., on Nov. 1, 2025. (Justin Ford/Getty Images)

Confederate flags were once a common sight at Mississippi football games until the university effectively phased them out in 1997 by banning flagpoles.

Until 2003, the school’s mascot, Colonel Reb, reflected its Civil War-era past. The program still uses the “Rebels” nickname and the “Ole Miss” moniker, both tied to the state’s slavery-era history.

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Kiffin later clarified his comments saying, “I just hope [my comment] comes across respectful to Ole Miss. … There are some things that I’m saying that are factual, they’re not shots.” he told On3.

“I really apologize if anybody at Ole Miss or in Mississippi was offended by that,” Kiffin said. “In a four-hour interview, I was asked a lot of questions on a lot of things, and Ole Miss has been wonderful to me and to my family. I was asked questions about the differences in recruiting, and I said a narrative that we battled there from some out-of-state Black parents and grandparents was not wanting their kid to move to Mississippi. That’s a narrative that coaches have been fighting forever. It wasn’t calculated by bringing it up.”

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UK housebuilder Vistry warns of ‘significantly’ lower profits amid Iran war uncertainty | Vistry Group

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One of the UK’s biggest housebuilders has said its profits will be “significantly” lower, as it was forced to cut prices after heightened uncertainty caused by the US-Israeli war on Iran.

Vistry’s shares plunged 10.5% in early trading on Wednesday, hitting their lowest level in nearly 15 years, as it told shareholders its first-half profits would be hit by the fallout from the Middle East conflict.

In a stock market update hours before its annual general meeting, the housebuilder, which owns Bovis Homes, Countryside and Linden Homes, said circumstances had changed since it last updated investors in March. It said: “The level of macroeconomic uncertainty has increased, and with it the range of potential outcomes for the current year.”

While the rate of sales was higher than a year earlier, buyers had become cautious in recent weeks, “reflecting uncertainty arising from the Middle East conflict”, it said. The war had “created some upward pressure” on the costs of building materials and worker wages, which were likely to continue into the second half of the year, it added.

Vistry said it was “mitigating these where possible”, including by negotiating with its suppliers, and in the meantime was trying to lure buyers through bigger incentives and discounts. Together, those efforts are expected to weigh on profits, Vistry said. It has also halted its programme of buying its own shares “to prioritise debt reduction”.

“We expect [first-half] profit to be significantly lower than the prior year,” the company said, adding that it expected a partial recovery in the second half of the year, with profits due to be flat compared to 2025. It said adjusted pre-tax profits for the entirety of 2026 would probably be in the “middle of the range” of analyst forecasts.

Vistry’s new chief executive, Adam Daniels, is now launching a company-wide “operational review”, with the results expected to be announced in September.

Vistry has been no stranger to unexpected drops in profit, having issued three profit warnings in 2024. Bosses managed to stabilise the business, reporting a 2% rise in adjusted pre-tax profit for the 2025 financial year.

“Vistry’s trading update paints a bleak picture of the UK housing market,” said Anthony Codling, a managing director of equity research at RBC Capital Markets. “Today’s update contains good and bad news: progress is being made, but market conditions are providing little, if any, help and execution risks remain high. Vistry is not out of the woods yet, but it is one step closer to the edge of the forest.”

Meanwhile, the estate agent Savills said that while it was trading marginally ahead of forecasts, it was expecting the Iran war to weigh on UK housing sales.

“Within our key ​UK market … ​we have seen greater caution ​among both buyers and sellers ‌since the onset of the Middle East conflict,” it said. It added that its Middle Eastern business, which accounts for roughly 5% of its annual underlying profits, had also “slowed materially” during the crisis.



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Meatstock carnivore diet convention draws fans, diet experts to Tennessee


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Carnivores from far and wide descended recently on Gatlinburg, Tennessee, to partake in Meatstock, a convention for followers of meat-based diets.

The weekend gathering featured presentations from experts, panel discussions and vendors centered on carnivore and keto diets — as well as biohacking. 

In the wake of the convention, Texas biochemist and author Nathan Bryan, who presented at Meatstock, told Fox News Digital, “Americans are the sickest people on the planet.” 

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“Nine out of 10 Americans are metabolically unfit, two out of three Americans have an unsafe elevation of blood pressure and nearly half of the people in America are diabetic or pre-diabetic,” he added. “That can be attributed to the foods we eat.”

Bryan said he was extremely compelled by stories from Meatstock attendees, who talked about how much weight they lost and autoimmune diseases they cured by switching to a meat-based diet.

A man cuts a cooked steak with a knife and fork.

The Meatstock convention drew a crowd of people who prescribe to a meat-based diet. (iStock)

“What I found at Meatstock was people who eat mainly just a meat-based diet, high protein and really good fats with limited or no carbs or plants,” Bryan said. 

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“These people seem to be the healthiest, and then they’re able to reverse disease without drug therapy.”

These outcomes were self-reported by attendees and are not broadly established in clinical research.

A woman in an apron salts a raw piece of meat on a cutting board.

Meat-based diets can lead to weight loss and disease reversal, some adherents claim. (iStock)

Meat-centric eating has its fair share of critics. Tara Schmidt, a registered dietitian and instructor of nutrition at Mayo Clinic, cautioned that carnivore-type diets put people at risk of missing out on essential nutrients like fiber, calcium and Vitamin D.

They also lack balance and are too restrictive to be sustainable long-term for many people, Schmidt said.

“I put a lot of emphasis on the science and clinical data behind [these diets], and it was impressive.”

The science presented at the Meatstock convention was intriguing, Bryan said.  

“I come from academia as a former professor of medicine,” Bryan said. “So I put a lot of emphasis on the science and clinical data behind [these diets], and it was impressive.”

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The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) unveiled a new food pyramid and Dietary Guidelines for Americans earlier this year. The updated guidance reflects a broader shift in federal nutrition messaging, while also prompting debate among health experts.

The new guidelines encourage people to eat “a variety of protein foods from animal sources,” including red meat, and are a radical departure from previous recommendations that emphasized carbohydrates.

A woman selects a package of meat from a grocery store cooler.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recently changed dietary guidelines, advising people to incorporate more meat into their meals. (iStock)

The new guidelines have attracted much scrutiny. In an article on the release of the new guidelines, for instance, UC Berkeley Public Health reported, “When the federal government issued its recommendations for a healthy diet last week, many nutritionists and health care providers were appalled.”

It is widely believed that misinformation about nutrition dates back to Ancel Keys, a physiologist whose “Seven Countries Study” is responsible for many accepted modern ideas about cholesterol and heart disease, Bryan said. 

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However, many nutrition researchers continue to cite Keys’ work as foundational, even as aspects of it have been debated over time.

“At every meal, I eat meat.”

Special-interest groups, such as vegan societies, have used Keys’ research to “demonize” meat and perpetrate widespread misconceptions about nutrition, Bryan said.

During an address to the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association in February, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. declared that the “war on protein is over.”

A man wearing disposable gloves cuts a piece of beef with a knive.

Prioritizing protein is a new trend that followers of a meat-based diet say improves overall health. (iStock)

Bryan himself is not a strict carnivore, but each one of his meals includes some form of protein — mainly red meat

He also fasts for 18 hours every day.

“I have a ranch in Texas and I grow my own beef, so I know the food that I’m getting is free of antibiotics and growth hormones and all that,” Bryan said.

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“I usually eat meat with some kind of low-glycemic-index starch, whether it’s a baked potato, a sweet potato or maybe rice,” he said. 

“I have my own garden, so I eat green beans and corn. I usually eat a salad, usually before a meal. For me, it’s a balanced diet in moderation — but at every meal, I eat meat.”



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