Micah Parsons says Cowboys not signing him to extension already will 'cost them more' eventuallyNew Foto - Micah Parsons says Cowboys not signing him to extension already will 'cost them more' eventually

Dallas CowboyslinebackerMicah Parsonsattended the team's mandatory minicamp this week, despite not coming to an agreement on a new contract. (However, he skipped voluntary OTAs in the spring.) His current deal expires after this season. In the edge rusher's view, team owner Jerry Jones would have already saved money had he signed Parsons to an extension by now. "It's going to cost them more," Parsons toldlongtime reporter Clarence Hill Jr. of DLLS. Parsons, 26, is in a race with fellow pass-rushersTrey HendricksonandT.J. Wattto become the highest-paid non-quarterback in the NFL with a new deal. Both of those players didn't report to mandatory minicamps amid their respective contract disputes. The four-time Pro Bowler said he and Jones made a handshake deal in March, according to Hill (via Pro Football Talk). But the Cowboys owner reportedly never called Parsons' agent to work out the final details of a contract. Parsons claims that he has seen what Watt is asking for from thePittsburgh Steelers, which has not been reported. Whatever Watt is seeking is more than what Parsons and Jones had agreed to, according to the four-year veteran. And if Watt gets the contract he wants, Parsons will almost certainly ask for more, which is what he meant with his remarks to Hill. Myles Garrettcurrently holds the belt of the league'shighest-paid pass-rusherafter agreeing in March to a four-year extension with theCleveland Brownsthat pays him an average annual salary of $40 million. However,Ja'Marr Chase's new deal with theCincinnati Bengals,signed less than a week later, edged him out for the top non-QB spot, at $40.25 million per season. Parsons is set to bepaid $24 million this seasonafter the Cowboyspicked up his fifth-year option. He hopes to get a new deal finalized before training camp begins on July 21. If no deal is done, he says he will report but not practice. In his NFL career, Parsons has averaged 14 sacks per season, with 69 tackles, two forced fumbles and 17 tackles for loss. He won Defensive Rookie of the Year honors and was named first-team All-Pro in his first two seasons. Last year, Parsons was named second-team All-Pro after notching 12 sacks.

Micah Parsons says Cowboys not signing him to extension already will 'cost them more' eventually

Micah Parsons says Cowboys not signing him to extension already will 'cost them more' eventually Dallas CowboyslinebackerMicah Parso...
NASCAR's Jeff Gordon Jokes About Teaching His 2 Teenagers How to Drive: 'Oh Boy'New Foto - NASCAR's Jeff Gordon Jokes About Teaching His 2 Teenagers How to Drive: 'Oh Boy'

CHRIS DELMAS/AFP/Getty Jeff Gordon is sharing how he approaches teaching his kids to drive The former professional race car driver is also hoping to get his teenagers driving a stick shift this summer Gordon shares his kids with wife Ingrid Vandebosch Jeff Gordonmay be a former professional race car driver, but he's just like any other dad when it comes to teaching his kids how to drive. On Tuesday, June 10, Gordon appeared on an episode ofTodayand spoke about what it was like teaching his daughter, Ella, 17, how to drive. Gordon shares Ella and son Leo, 14, with wife Ingrid Vandebosch. When asked how he teaches them how to get behind the wheel, Gordon cheekily replied, "Very carefully." "Very carefully. I mean, you get 'em started young. You go to the parking lot," he joked. "You get in the driveway." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. He was then asked if he'd taught his kids how to drive stick, which is how one historically drives a race car. "My goal this summer is to get both of my kids to learn how to drive stick," the dad of two said. "So it is definitely a goal." "But I will say, one of the most terrifying moments I've had is being in the passenger seat. I'm not a very good passenger to begin with, when my daughter was first getting her permit. Oh boy." Although Ella is now driving, getting her license wasn't the first time she was behind the wheel. When she was 6, Gordon introduced her to the world of racing. "Ella driving a quarter midget for the first time yesterday," he captioned anInstagram postin April 2014. "The smile says it all." However, Gordon later shared that racing didn't seem to be something she was interested in. "[Racing] didn't seem to stick," Gordon shared onThe Charlotte Observerpodcast in November 2023. Instead, her interest in speed came in another form: running. "My daughter is the athlete in the family," he said. "She's the speed demon. She runs track." He went on to call her "a tremendous athlete" in track and field. Sean Gardner/Getty "She [also] plays field hockey. She can play about anything, honestly. She can high jump, pole vault," he said proudly. His son also learned how to drive a quarter midget early on, at the age of 7. In 2017, Gordon shared a video of his son driving laps for the first time on hiswebsite. "He had a lot of fun!" he wrote. Similar to his sister, though, Leo didn't want to follow in their dad's footsteps. "They just have other interests and that's fine," Gordon said onThe Charlotte Observerpodcast. "I want to support them and whatever they're passionate about." In fact, Gordon's son seemed to be more interested in the entertainment industry. "I think he might want to be a YouTube star one day, you know, an influencer," he said with a laugh. Read the original article onPeople

NASCAR's Jeff Gordon Jokes About Teaching His 2 Teenagers How to Drive: 'Oh Boy'

NASCAR's Jeff Gordon Jokes About Teaching His 2 Teenagers How to Drive: 'Oh Boy' CHRIS DELMAS/AFP/Getty Jeff Gordon is sharing h...
US Senate Republicans seek to limit judges' power via Trump's tax-cut billNew Foto - US Senate Republicans seek to limit judges' power via Trump's tax-cut bill

By Nate Raymond (Reuters) -U.S. Senate Republicans have added language to President Donald Trump's massive tax and spending bill that would restrict the ability of judges to block government policies they conclude are unlawful. Text of the Republican-led U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee's contribution to the bill released by its chair, Senator Chuck Grassley, late on Thursday would limit the ability of judges to issue preliminary injunctions blocking federal policies unless the party suing posts a bond to cover the government's costs if the ruling is later overturned. The bond requirement in the Senate's version of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act is different from the provision the Republican-controlled House of Representatives included when it passed the bill last month that would curb courts' power in a different way. The House version curtails the ability of judges to enforce orders holding officials in contempt if they violate injunctions. Judges use contempt orders to bring parties into compliance, usually by ratcheting up measures from fines to jail time. Some judges who have blocked Trump administration actions have said officials are at risk of being held in contempt for not complying with their orders. Congressional Republicans have called for banning or curtailing nationwide injunctions blocking government policies after key parts of Trump's agenda have been stymied by such court rulings. The House in April voted 219-213 along largely party lines in favor of the No Rogue Rulings Act to do so, but the Senate has not yet taken up the measure. A White House memo in March directed heads of government agencies to request that plaintiffs post bonds if they are seeking an injunction against an agency policy. Such bonds can make obtaining an injunction a cost-prohibitive option in cases concerning multi-billion-dollar agenda items. Grassley's office said in a statement the language the Judiciary Committee proposed would ensure judges enforce an existing requirement that they make a party seeking a preliminary injunction provide a security bond to cover costs incurred by a defendant if a judge's ruling is later overturned. Judges rarely require such bonds when a lawsuit is not pitting two private parties against each other but instead challenging an alleged unlawful or unconstitutional government action. Several judges have denied the Trump administration's requests for bonds or issued nominal ones. Republicans, who control the Senate 53-47, are using complex budget rules to pass the One Big Beautiful Bill Act with a simple majority vote, rather than the 60 votes needed to advance most legislation in the 100-seat chamber. The Senate Judiciary Committee's piece of the bill would also provide the judiciary funding to study the costs to taxpayers associated with such injunctions and provide training for judges about the problems associated with them. A spokesperson for Senator Dick Durbin, the Senate Judiciary Committee's top Democrat, criticized the Republican-drafted legislative text, saying "Republicans are targeting nationwide injunctions because they're beholden to a president who is breaking the law — but the courts are not." (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; additional reporting by Andy Sullivan in Washington, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Rod Nickel)

US Senate Republicans seek to limit judges' power via Trump's tax-cut bill

US Senate Republicans seek to limit judges' power via Trump's tax-cut bill By Nate Raymond (Reuters) -U.S. Senate Republicans have a...
Transgender Navy pilot, barred from service, reflects on 'patriotism' ahead of Trump's military paradeNew Foto - Transgender Navy pilot, barred from service, reflects on 'patriotism' ahead of Trump's military parade

As the U.S. military prepares to celebrate the legacy of theArmywitha massive parade in Washington, D.C.on Saturday, some transgender service members are grappling with an involuntary end to their careers after the Trump administration banned them from the military. "I'm heartbroken," said Cmdr. Emily Shilling, a decoratedNavypilot who is also the lead plaintiff in Shilling vs. Trump -- one of three federal lawsuits challenging the Trump administration's executive order barring transgender service members. Shilling, who is based in the D.C. area, is also the president of Sparta Pride -- an organization advocating for 2,400 transgender people in the military and those who hope to join. Reflecting on the upcoming parade commemorating the 250th anniversary of the Army's founding, Shilling, who has served since 2005, told ABC News that "military might does not equal patriotism." "The members who take an oath and dedicate their lives to service -- that's patriotism, whether or not we have tanks or rocket launchers, that has nothing to do with it," Shilling said. Trump's military parade: What to know about the Army anniversary event And according to Shilling, for active duty members of Sparta, whowere faced with the "heartbreaking" decision to voluntarily separatefrom the military or get kicked out, abandoning their commitment to serving their country is what's "keeping them up at night." "When I sit in these town halls that we do with Sparta, people are really struggling with the idea of giving up or quitting, or, you know, not fulfilling their oath," she said. "And that's actually what's keeping these men, women and folks you know, up at night. They feel like they have a duty to keep serving and keep fighting." The Pentagon's new ban went into effect in early May shortly after the Supreme Court ruled that the Trump administration could enforce the ban on transgender people in the military while legal challenges proceed in lower courts. After the Supreme Court ruling, the Pentagon issued a memo giving active duty service members until June 6 -- last Friday -- to self-identify and begin the voluntary separation process. Transgender service members in the reserve forces have until July 7 to voluntarily separate. Senate Democrats file bill to prevent ban on transgender military service The memo also stated that after June 6, military commanders will be told to identify people in their units who have a diagnosis or history of gender dysphoria or exhibit symptoms consistent with gender dysphoria. The move would initiate a referral to an annual health check-up that would begin what could be a lengthy process for each individual that could lead to their removal from the military. Shilling, who will be eligible for retirement at 20 years in September, told ABC News that faced with these options, she chose to self-identify and begin the process of voluntarily separating from the military, but noted that she made the decision "under duress." "I hit my retirement date in September. So if I didn't volunteer at that time, I could theoretically be kicked out between June and September and lose everything," she said. "So it was very much a decision made under duress. You know, I was coerced into it because we knew that the voluntary separation would give me an honorable discharge with some portion of my retirement, and I'd be able to keep all of my benefits." The Pentagon incentivized service members with gender dysphoria to voluntarily separate ahead of the June 6 deadline by offering benefit payment packages that would be more than double what would be received if they were to separate involuntarily. Those who voluntarily separated would not have to risk paying back the recruitment or retention bonuses they may have earned during their military service. Its policy came after the Trump administration announced a ban on transgender service members in a Jan. 27 executive order, where President Donald Trump directed the Defense Department to revise the policy allowing transgender troops to openly serve. "Expressing a false 'gender identity' divergent from an individual's sex cannot satisfy the rigorous standards necessary for military service," the order said. The order further argued that receiving gender-affirming medical care is one of the conditions that is physically and mentally "incompatible with active duty." Transgender service members say they face 'heartbreaking' decision amid Trump ban: Leave military or get kicked out Defense officials estimate that as of last December, about 4,240 current active-duty, National Guard and Reserve service members had been diagnosed with gender dysphoria. There are more than 2.1 million military service members serving on active-duty, National Guard and the Reserves. Advocacy groups have put the actual number of transgender service members as being much higher, at around 15,000. "There's a lot of fear," Shilling said, reflecting on service members like herself who are losing their jobs. She also said that being banned from the military has taken an emotional toll on the community -- some of whom have left "rough homes" and found a family in the military. "For a lot of people, this was, you know, the dream they've always wanted, and now their family is saying, you're not good enough. They're being rejected again by another family," she said. "And that's pretty brutal." When asked how she feels about her decision to voluntarily separate from the military, Shilling said that she is at "peace" because she knows that the fight is not over. "I'm at peace," she said. "I'm going to thrive, and I'm going to be able to fight this … and continue to fight for that America that I believe in -- that good, righteous America, and a lot of these service members feel very much the same." Transgender Navy pilot, barred from service, reflects on 'patriotism' ahead of Trump's military paradeoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Transgender Navy pilot, barred from service, reflects on 'patriotism' ahead of Trump's military parade

Transgender Navy pilot, barred from service, reflects on 'patriotism' ahead of Trump's military parade As the U.S. military prep...
U.S. Open: Rory McIlroy loses his cool ... twiceNew Foto - U.S. Open: Rory McIlroy loses his cool ... twice

OAKMONT, Pa. — Rory McIlroy lost his cool. Twice. But he will still make the cut, though just barely, at the 125th U.S. Open. McIlroy started his day 4-over par after a shaky 74 in Round 1. He then proceeded to double bogey two of his first three holes on Friday. At that point, making the weekend was not looking good. Things boiled over at the 12th when he hooked his approach on the par 5 into the rough. That prompted this reaction: pic.twitter.com/YBn2oJmLer — Tom Hobbs (@flushingitpod)June 13, 2025 He would actually go on to par the hole, so no damage done ... except for maybe to the club. At 17, his temper got the better of him again after he put his drive on the short par 4 into a greenside bunker. Pure.pic.twitter.com/vQFljgSWKi — TRACKING RORY (@TrackingRory)June 13, 2025 Again, he would go on to par the hole — a good score on a day at Oakmont where only a handful of the 156 players actually shot under par — so no harm done ... except to the tee marker. A clutch approach at 18 to inside five feet set up as easy a birdie look, which he converted to get himself to +6 — just inside the cut line. See you this weekend, Rory.Our 2011 champion will make the cut at Oakmont.pic.twitter.com/H5LZtSzJx8 — U.S. Open (@usopengolf)June 13, 2025 McIlroy will go into the weekend nine shots back of Sam Burns, who carded a brilliant 5-under 65 on Friday — the lowest round of the tournament so far. Burns is at 3-under, one of just three golfers under par.

U.S. Open: Rory McIlroy loses his cool ... twice

U.S. Open: Rory McIlroy loses his cool ... twice OAKMONT, Pa. — Rory McIlroy lost his cool. Twice. But he will still make the cut, though ju...
Anthony Richardson reportedly expected to be healthy for Colts training camp after 2nd injury to throwing shoulderNew Foto - Anthony Richardson reportedly expected to be healthy for Colts training camp after 2nd injury to throwing shoulder

It sounds like the Anthony Richardson-Daniel Jones quarterback competition will go forward as planned. NFL Network's Ian Rapoport reported Friday that Richardson is expected to be healthy and ready for the start of Indianapolis Colts training camp after suffering a second injury to his throwing shoulder during offseason drills. "He is expected to be fine by training camp,"Rapoport said. TheColts announced on June 5Richardson would not participate in mandatory minicamp that started Tuesday after he reported soreness in his right shoulder. The injury was to the same shoulder that required AC joint surgery during Richardson's rookie year. The initial injury sidelined Richardson for the final 12 games of the 2023 season. Head coachShane Steichen told reporters Tuesdaythat Richardson flew to Los Angeles to meet with orthopedic surgeon Dr. Neal ElAttrache for a second opinion. ElAttrache performed Richardson's 2023 surgery. Per Steichen, ElAttrache agreed with the initial prognosis that Richardson did not require another procedure. Herecommended rest and rehabilitationfor the injury. Steichen told reporters at the time Richardson still did not have a timeline to return. Richardson wasn't completely sidelined for Colts minicamp, which ended Thursday. He was seen doing footwork drills and shadowing the offense without throwing the football. Anthony Richardson doing what he canpic.twitter.com/BDjMNtxnat — Kent Sterling (@KentSterling)June 12, 2025 #ColtsQB Anthony Richardson doing some mental reps.pic.twitter.com/QqWmwTUpgH — James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid)June 10, 2025 If Richardson is ready for the start of training camp, the 2023 No. 4 overall draft pick is expected to engage in a true quarterback competition with Jones, the former Giants quarterback who signed with the Colts this offseason. Richardson struggled last season in his return from his shoulder injury. He made 11 starts and was eventually benched in favor of veteran backupJoe Flaccobefore returning to the lineup late in the season. The accuracy issue that plagued him in his brief rookie stint worsened as he completed 47.7% of his passes for 5.4 yards per attempt with eight touchdowns and 12 interceptions. TheColts signed Jonesin the offseason to compete with Richardson. Like Richardson, Jones has struggled in the NFL, primarily with turnovers, after being selected in the first round. Jones threw 47 interceptions and fumbled 50 times in his 70 games with the Giants in six seasons. The Giantssigned him to an extensionto his rookie contract in 2023 after he showed signs of improvement. But they benched him and ultimately cut him in 2024 after he regressed. He signed with the Vikings late in the season, but didn't play a snap. Colts general manager Chris Ballard said in Februaryhe wanted "real competition"for Richardson. The Colts then signed Jones in March to a one-year, $14 million contract. If Richardson does return healthy, he'll engage with Jones in one of the most intriguing position battles in the NFL.

Anthony Richardson reportedly expected to be healthy for Colts training camp after 2nd injury to throwing shoulder

Anthony Richardson reportedly expected to be healthy for Colts training camp after 2nd injury to throwing shoulder It sounds like the Anthon...
Kennedy's HHS sent Congress 'junk science' to defend vaccine changes, experts sayNew Foto - Kennedy's HHS sent Congress 'junk science' to defend vaccine changes, experts say

A document the Department of Health and Human Services sent to lawmakers to support Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s decision to change U.S. policy on covid vaccines cites scientific studies that are unpublished or under dispute and mischaracterizes others. One health expert called the document "willful medical disinformation" about the safety of covid vaccines for children and pregnant women. "It is so far out of left field that I find it insulting to our members of Congress that they would actually give them something like this. Congress members are relying on these agencies to provide them with valid information, and it's just not there," saidMark Turrentine, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Baylor College of Medicine. Kennedy, who was an anti-vaccine activist before taking a role in the Trump administration, announced May 27 that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would no longer recommend covid vaccines for pregnant women or healthy children, bypassing the agency's formal process for adjusting its vaccine schedules for adults and kids. The announcement,made on the social platform X, has been met with outrage by many pediatricians and scientists. The HHS document meant to support Kennedy's decision, obtained by KFF Health News, was sent to members of Congress who questioned the science and process behind his move, according to one federal official who asked not to be identified because he wasn't authorized to discuss the matter publicly. The document has not been posted on the HHS website, though it is the first detailed explanation of Kennedy's announcement from the agency. Titled "Covid Recommendation FAQ," the document distorts some legitimate studies and cites others that are disputed and unpublished, medical experts say. HHS director of communications Andrew Nixon told KFF Health News, "There is no distortion of the studies in this document. The underlying data speaks for itself, and it raises legitimate safety concerns. HHS will not ignore that evidence or downplay it. We will follow the data and the science." HHS did not respond to a request to name the author of the document. One of the studiesthe HHS document cites is under investigation by its publisher regarding "potential issues with the research methodology and conclusions and author conflicts of interest," according to a link onthe study's webpage. "This is RFK Jr.'s playbook," saidSean O'Leary, chair of the Committee on Infectious Diseases for the American Academy of Pediatrics and an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. "Either cherry-pick from good science or take junk science to support his premise — this has been his playbook for 20 years." Anotherstudy citedin the document is a preprint that has not been peer-reviewed. Under the study's title is an alert that "it reports new medical research that has yet to be evaluated and so should not be used to guide clinical practice." Though the preprint was made available a year ago, it has not been published in a peer-reviewed journal. The FAQ supporting Kennedy's decision claims that "post-marketing studies" of covid vaccines have identified "serious adverse effects, such as an increased risk of myocarditis and pericarditis" — conditions in which the heart's muscle or its covering, the pericardium, suffer inflammation. False claims that the 2024 preprint showed myocarditis and pericarditis only in people who received a covid vaccine, and not in people infected with covid, circulated on social media. One of thestudy's co-authorspublicly rejected that idea, because the study did not compare outcomes between people who were vaccinated and those infected with the covid virus. The study also focused only on children and adolescents. The HHS document omitted numerousotherpeer-reviewedstudiesthat have shown that the risk of myocarditis and pericarditis is greater after contracting covid for both vaccinated and non-vaccinated people than the risk of the same complications after vaccination alone. O'Leary said that while some cases of myocarditis were reported in vaccinated adolescent boys and young men early in the covid pandemic, the rates declined after the two initial doses of covid vaccines were spaced further apart. Now, adolescents and adults who have not been previously vaccinated receive only one shot, and myocarditis no longer shows up in the data, O'Leary said, referring to the CDC'sVaccine Safety Datalink. "There is no increased risk at this point that we can identify," he said. In two instances, the HHS memo makes claims that areactively refutedbythe papersit cites to back them up. Both papers support the safety and effectiveness of covid vaccines for pregnant women. The HHS document says that anotherpaper it citesfound "an increase in placental blood clotting in pregnant mothers who took the vaccine." But the paper doesn't contain any reference to placental blood clots or to pregnant women. "I've now read it three times. And I cannot find that anywhere," said Turrentine, the OB-GYN professor. If he were grading the HHS document, "I would give this an 'F,'" Turrentine said. "This is not supported by anything and it's not using medical evidence." While members of Congress who are physicians should know to check references in the paper, they may not take the time to do so, saidNeil Silverman,a professor of clinical obstetrics and gynecology who directs the Infectious Diseases in Pregnancy Program at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. "They're going to assume this is coming from a scientific agency. So they are being hoodwinked along with everyone else who has had access to this document," Silverman said. The offices of three Republicans in Congress who are medical doctors serving on House and Senate committees focused on health, including Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), did not respond to requests for comment about whether they received the memo. Emily Druckman, communications director for Rep. Kim Schrier (D-Wash.), a physician serving on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, confirmed that Schrier's office did receive a copy of the document. "The problem is a lot of legislators and even their staffers, they don't have the expertise to be able to pick those references apart," O'Leary said. "But this one — I've seen much better anti-vaccine propaganda than this, frankly." C.J. Young, deputy communications director for the House Energy and Commerce Committee, confirmed that Democratic staff members of the committee received the document from HHS. In the past, he said, similar documents would help clarify the justification and scope of an administration's policy change and could be assumed to be scientifically accurate, Young said. "This feels like it's breaking new ground. I don't think that we saw this level of sloppiness or inattention to detail or lack of consideration for scientific merit under the first Trump administration," Young said. On June 4, Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) and Schrierintroduced a billthat would require Kennedy to adopt official vaccine decisions from the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP. Young said the motivation behind the bill was Kennedy's decision to change the covid vaccine schedule without the input of ACIP's vaccine experts, who play a key role in setting CDC policies around vaccine schedules and access. Kennedy announced June 9 on X that he would remove all 17 members of ACIP, citing alleged conflicts of interest he did not detail, and replace them. He announced eight replacements June 11, including people who had criticized vaccine mandates during the covid pandemic. KFF Health Newsis a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs atKFF— the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Kennedy’s HHS sent Congress ‘junk science’ to defend vaccine changes, experts say

Kennedy's HHS sent Congress 'junk science' to defend vaccine changes, experts say A document the Department of Health and Human ...

 

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