Archive August 26, 2025

England may lack ‘killer instinct’ needed for Ashes – Langer

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Former Australia head coach Justin Langer believes that England may lack the killer instinct to win the Ashes this winter.

Before leaving in 2022, Langer, 54, won four Ashes series as a player and was unbeaten in two as a coach.

England and Australia played a crucial part in the UK 2-2 draw this summer, and they also played a crucial part in the final game of the series against Australia at 2-2 in 2023.

On the BBC Sounds’ For the Love of Cricket podcast, Langer stated, “It’s going to be a really, really close series. Have you got the killer instinct to win a series if you have a chance, England, please?

In the previous Ashes series, two-all against India, we saw it, “we’ve seen it, the two-all here.”

“That series had the best chances,” England said. Have you developed the deadly instinct to defeat Australia in the Ashes? The big question will be about that.

England only have won one Ashes series there since 1987, including a 3-1 victory in 2010-11.

Since their previous three attempts to lose without winning a match, Langer believes the tourists will need to be aggressive to get through the tour, which kicks off with the first Test in Perth on November 21.

Call it Bazball or “the aggressive approach,” England must “play” it in Australia, in my opinion. No question, because it will put pressure back on, he said.

“The only players who defeated Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath were those who attacked them,” said one player. No one did it, so they hated it and reacted accordingly.

Men’s Ashes 2025-26 schedule

First Test, November 21 through November 25 at Optus Stadium in Perth.

Gabba’s second test will take place in Brisbane on December 4 through 8th.

Adelaide Oval, Adelaide, December 17-21

26-30 December, MCG, Melbourne, MCG, Fourth Test

related subjects

  • England Men’s Cricket Team
  • Australia
  • Cricket

US warships head to Venezuela: Fight against cartels or imperial ambition?

According to reports, President Donald Trump’s plan to fight drug trafficking is drawing near US warships in southern Caribbean waters and, as a result, they are approaching Venezuelan waters.

The Trump administration has accused Venezuela’s left-wing President Nicolas Maduro of being involved in cocaine trafficking and working with drug cartels. According to their claim that Maduro is “one of the largest narco-traffickers in the world,” the US Departments of State and Justice increased the reward for information leading to his arrest to $50 million on August 7.

Maduro has retaliated by urging millions of Venezuelans to join militias, saying that no empire will ever enter the country’s holy soil.

On Monday, the Venezuelan government announced that it is sending 15, 000 troops to its border with Colombia to fight drug trafficking, amid growing pressure from the Trump administration.

So why are US warships entering Venezuelan waters, and how are Latin American nations like Venezuela seeing this?

Why do Venezuelan waters have navy warships being sent by the Trump administration?

Multiple news reports say that the Trump administration has dispatched navy warships to the southern Caribbean, saying that these missions are intended to counter threats to US national security posed by organisations in the region that the US has designated as “narco-terrorist organizations”.

Trump reportedly ratified a secret order last month that would require the US to use force against a number of Latin American drug cartels that the US has labeled as international “terrorists.”

According to two sources with knowledge of the deployment, the US sent additional ships to the southern Caribbean on Monday, according to the Reuters news agency.

The sources told Reuters, on the condition of anonymity, that the USS Lake Erie, a guided missile cruiser and the USS Newport News, a nuclear-powered fast attack submarine, will arrive in the region by early next week.

Three US Aegis-class guided missile destroyers were reported to be entering Venezuelan waters last week by numerous news outlets.

The USS San Antonio, USS Iwo Jima, and USS Fort Lauderdale were heading toward Venezuelan shore, according to two people who spoke to Reuters anonymously. They were carrying 4,500 US service members, among them 2, 200 Marines.

In both the reports, Reuters said that the unnamed sources refrained from disclosing the specific objectives of the deployments but indicated that recent military movements were intended to address threats to US national security posed by designated “narco-terrorist organizations”.

According to a news release from the US Fleet Forces Command on August 14, sailors and marines from Camp Lejeune, North Carolina and Norfolk, Virginia had left. The mission’s details are not provided in the press release, and where the group is stationed.

The release says, “More than 4, 500 Sailors and Marines from the 22nd MEU comprise the force aboard the ARG’s three amphibious ships: flagship USS Iwo Jima (LHD 7), and the San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock ships USS San Antonio (LPD 17) and USS Fort Lauderdale (LPD 28)”.

Reporters inquired about the possibility of US ground forces in Venezuela on August 19 when Karoline Leavitt was contacted by the White House. She responded, “President Donald Trump has been very clear and consistent.” He’s prepared to use every element of American power to stop drugs from flooding into our country and to bring those responsible to justice”.

Leavitt once more stated that the US does not recognize Maduro’s government as Venezuela’s legitimate one. The disputed election from last year was won by Maharo. The US and Venezuela have not had a formal diplomatic relationship since 2019.

How is Trump retaliating against drug trafficking?

Trump signed an executive order designating international drug cartels as “terrorist” organizations on January 21 for his inauguration day.

“In certain portions of Mexico, they function as quasi-governmental entities”, the order says. Mexico objected to the order because it threatened to have US forces intervene against it.

Claudia Sheinbaum, the president of Mexico, responded that her country would work with the US to combat drug trafficking, but she insisted that the US would not intervene on its soil. “What we insist on is the defence of our sovereignty and our independence”, she said back in January.

Trump also claimed that Canada and Mexico failed to stop the highly addictive synthetic opioid fentanyl from entering the US, despite providing no proof for his claims.

Sheinbaum sent 10,000 National Guard personnel to the US-Mexico border to help with immigration regulation after Trump threatened to impose tariffs on Mexican imports.

On February 20, the US State Department designated eight international cartels as foreign terrorist organisations, including Mexico-based Cartel del Golfo, Sinaloa Cartel, Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generacion, Carteles Unidos, La Nueva Familia Michoacana and Cartel del Noreste, California-based Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13), and Venezuela-based Tren de Aragua.

29 drug cartel leaders were handed over to the US later in February.

What crimes is Maduro being charged with by the US?

US officials accused both Maduro and Venezuelan Minister of Popular Power for Interior Diosdado Cabello of collaborating with the Cartel de los Soles (“Cartel of the Suns”), a drug trafficking organisation that Washington has designated as a “terrorist” group. Similar to Maduro, Cabello is a member of the Venezuelan Socialist Party (PSUV) that is in power.

Maduro has earlier refuted the claims made by the Trump administration. The US government has not provided any evidence linking Maduro to drug cartels.

The US announced earlier this month that Maduro’s drug-related fines had been increased to $50 million. In a video released on August 7, US Attorney General Pam Bondi claimed Maduro had collaborated with the Mexican Sinaloa Cartel and the Venezuelan crime syndicate Tren de Aragua. “He is one of the largest narco-traffickers in the world”, Bondi said about Maduro.

The US increased the reward for Cabello’s arrest or prosecution from $10 million to $25 million earlier this year.

During Trump’s first term in 2020, Maduro and his close allies were indicted in Manhattan federal court on federal charges of “narco-terrorism” and conspiracy to import cocaine. Washington offered a $15 million reward for his arrest at the time. This bounty was increased to $25 million by the US President’s administration.

How has the Venezuelan government responded?

Cabello announced on Monday that Caracas will send 15, 000 troops to improve border security in the Colombian states of Zulia and Tachira.

The minister also announced the seizure of 53 tonnes of drugs so far this year, saying, “Here, we do fight drug trafficking, here, we do fight drug cartels on all fronts.”

Cabello stated that the enhanced security measures along the border with Colombia, aimed at “combating criminal groups”, will also include the deployment of aircraft, drones and riverine security, according to local media outlet Noticias Venevision. Colombian authorities should take similar measures to “sure peace along the entire axis,” Cabello urged.

According to Maduro, “from the north, the empire has gone mad and has renewed its threats to the peace and stability of Venezuela,” according to Caracas-based news agency Globovision.

“We are not fakes nor drug traffickers, and we will defend the dignity of beloved Venezuela”, Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez told a crowd of military recruits over the weekend.

What has the opposition’s leadership in Venezuela said?

In an X-post on Monday, opposition figure Marina Corina Machado described Maduro as the “head of the Cartel of the Sun.” Machado was disqualified weeks before last year’s election.

Henrique Capriles, the head of the opposition, warned against using force against Venezuela. Regardless of where it came from, “We firmly reject any force that might be committed against Venezuela.” The sovereignty of our country is sacred and must be unconditionally respected. No State can attack another, as it is clearly stated in the UN Charter and international law, because it would lead to the loss of lives,” he wrote on X.

Capriles, who lost to Maduro for president in 2013, asserted that regional harmony must be preserved.

“The government, currently in power, has the duty to open the doors and create the mechanisms necessary to prevent our crisis from worsening further”.

Between 2019 and 2022, Juan Guaido, the interim president supported by the West, backed the US’s actions against Venezuelan cartels. Both the Tren de Aragua and the Cartel of the Suns have already been labeled as terrorist organizations. Their leader is not hidden in the shadows: his name is Nicolas Maduro, a dictator responsible for this criminal network that drains Venezuela and threatens the entire region”, he posted a statement on X on Monday.

What words did other leaders from Latin America use?

Sheinbaum, a representative for Mexico, claimed earlier this month that there is no proof linking Maduro to the Sinaloa Cartel, which has its headquarters in her country and is named after the state of Sinaloa.

Freddy Brazier announces podcast with unseen pics of mum Jade as he tackles addiction

Freddy Brazier, the son of Jeff and Jade Goody, recently revealed that he has been a smoker’s dependent since he was 12 years old. He is now releasing a new podcast, Load of Old Cobblers.

Freddy Brazier is launching a new podcast after a dramatic year in the spotlight(Image: freddybrazier_/Instagram)

Freddy Brazier is launching a new podcast after a dramatic year in the spotlight. The son of reality stars, Jade Goody and Jeff Brazier, 20, hit the headlines earlier this year after it was reported that his dad was seeking legal action against Freddy’s nan, Jackiey, who the model has been living with.

Freddy has also been dealing with addiction issues after admitting he’d been smoking since he was 12 after declaring he needed to go to rebab – before backtracking and saying a “retreat” would be better.

After a difficult year, Freddy has now revealed he’s starting a podcast, called Load of Old Cobblers, which he promoted on its Instagram page with unseen photos of Jade and her two sons before the Big Brother star tragically died, aged 29, from cervical cancer.

READ MORE: Jeff Brazier tells son Freddy ‘I hope you come home tonight’ after sweet reunionREAD MORE: Why Bobby Brazier has turned to Hare Krishna after family rift and search for happiness

Freddy Brazier
The son of Jeff Brazier and Jade Goody, Freddy Brazier, is launching a new podcast(Image: aloadofoldcobblerspod/instagram)

Freddy has the following name for the Instagram page, which has only one post so far: “Got bored so created a podcast! Bring the real with the rubbish. I’ll be discussing “mental health, life experiences, and a ton of pony”!

In a TikTok video released in March, Freddy revealed that he has ADHD and bipolar disorder. In response, Jeff reportedly filed a lawsuit against Jackiey because he was worried about her impact on his son.

Freddy Brazier and Jade
Freddy shared this unseen snap of mum, Jade Goody(Image: aloadofoldcobblerspod/instagram)

Freddy said, “I’m Freddy Brazier,” when he shared a video of himself in his garden during Epilepsy Awareness Week. Some might refer to me as the harsh mother Jade Goody, or the Big Brother star. Or my father, a well-known TV presenter, who is unknown, couldn’t tell you.

“Just coming on to say that seizures, like any other illness, shouldn’t be made fun of or funny.” He then revealed that I have bipolar disorder and ADHD, and that I also have serious mental health. And it’s not nice when others criticize you or criticize you for it.

Visit this account for more information about seizures and other things. Hope it is helpful.

Bobby and Freddy Brazier
The reality star with his older brother, Bobby(Image: aloadofoldcobblerspod/instagram)

After coming clean about smoking since he was 12, Freddy announced he was going to rehab to address his addiction issues.

Continue reading the article.

However, he then said he needed to take a “boy’s holiday” or “retreat” instead, which was a surprising U-turn.

His remarks came just as Bobby, Bobby’s older brother, announced that he would spend a year studying the Hare Krishna teachings.

READ MORE: Princess of Wales wears autumn’s most flattering shade as royal debuts bold new look

Critics Of FG’s Policies Should Be More Patriotic — APC Member

Abdul Oyakhire, an All Progressives Congress (APC) member in Edo State, has remarked that people should be interested in the positive aspects and developments rather than just the negative aspects of the nation.

“I believe that the government’s economic processes are evolving.” We as citizens must continue to be patriots to the nation because it is still a work in progress. On Tuesday, he said on Channels TV’s Sunrise Daily program that Nigerian critics need to learn to become more patriotic in their positions.

We must unite to support the president because Nigeria is for everyone. There is a lot of conflict with the government. Therefore, even though there is still much more to be expected of them, I believe we should give credit to the government for what it has accomplished so far.

Read more about PDP members’ demands for a ticket zoning in Bode George to the north.

Oyakhire cited the tendency of Nigerians to spread and emphasize the negative aspects of the nation rather than the positive aspects, especially on social media platforms.

“Bad news or negative information quickly spreads. You learn that the majority of the content on an average Nigerian blogger’s page is negative. You don’t find people promoting them as a result of the positives emerging.

It is simple to be in opposition because one doesn’t have to pay attention to reflex actions or reason.

However, you sometimes need the facts and the data to speak on behalf of the government. The president is doing a lot, he said, so we always advise Nigerians to stay away from negative things about the country and to occasionally speak up for the good.

The APC member claimed that a lack of communication is the cause of some or most Nigerians’ disapproval of the government’s policies.

Sri Lanka’s ex-President Wickremesinghe granted bail in embezzlement case

Former President Ranil Wickremesinghe was detained last week after being accused of using state funds while in office, but a court in Sri Lanka has since released him on bail.

Wickremesinghe, 76, was admitted to a state-run hospital over health concerns and showed up for the court hearing on Tuesday via Zoom.

In order to defend himself, he allegedly spent $55,000 in government funds on a visit to Britain in 2023, where he was a part of a celebration of his wife’s honorary professorship at a nearby university.

After a lengthy hearing held under heavy security, Colombo Fort Magistrate Nilupuli Lankapura ordered Wickremesinghe’s release on a 5-million rupee ($16,600) bond.

Before the hearing, hundreds of opposition politicians, protesters, and supporters gathered outside the court in Colombo.

On August 26, 2025, police restrain Wickremesinghe’s supporters in a protest on the street leading to the Colombo Fort Magistrate Court.

Samarasiri Kuruwitaarachchi, 69, a protester, claimed the government is now “trying to hunt down the political opponents” and has broken all of its promises made prior to the upcoming presidential election.

The demonstrations are a “sign of the independence of our judiciary,” according to Akila Viraj Kariyawasam, the deputy leader of Wickremesinghe’s United National Party (UNP).

“We spoke out in favor of democracy and due process. The government should keep taking steps to combat corruption. That is not what we want, Kariyawasam said.

The ruling party in Sri Lanka, led by President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, claims Wickremesinghe is innocent and that the allegations against him are politically motivated.

Before becoming president in 2022, Wickremesinghe served as Sri Lanka’s prime minister a record six times. He is a lawyer by profession.

The former president claims that his wife personally paid for her trip to Britain with no money from the government.

Hasbara with glitter: Israel’s politics of pleasure

Young Israelis stamp the earth to trance music in Goa, which is located about 4, 000 miles (6, 000 kilometers) from Gaza. You won’t hear mothers sighing over white draperies here. The purpose of the genocide is elsewhere, not here.

A similar scene appears across backpacker trails, stretching from Andean valleys to Thai beaches. A post-military “rite of passage” and a chance to “go insane peacefully,” as DJ Zirkin might put it, is called “tarmila’ut.”

It’s not just for hippies either. According to an Israeli study conducted in 2018, about 50, 000 people travel after service each year. Agency advertisements for all-inclusive amnesia, including kosher kitchens, deluxe accommodations, and hotels where Palestinians are extinct, cost a few thousand dollars.

The concept of “escape” has a different meaning now that the Nova music festival was massacred and there is a genocide in Gaza. Israelis want to leave the ha’matzav, which is an absurd euphemism that refers to occupation as unfavorable, to travel abroad. Gaza’s seas, skies, and crossings are sealed for Palestinians, so there is no escape. Palestinians are driven insane without peace while Israelis “go insane peacefully.”

They have been incarcerated in the West Bank for three years, and the M16 across their chests has rendered their small frames fatal. Then, they are only given a backpack and a one-way ticket by the state. This pilgrimage serves as both a reward for their actions and a zipped pocket for their crimes, with the hope that they never come back.

Some people find entertaining.

Tarmila’ut has become almost a required custom in Israel, and the state encourages it in the same way that it does for Eurovision and Brand Israel.

The state-controlled drug soma, which was portrayed in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, did more than just make the audience feel at ease and happy. Similar to how escapism in Israel recognizes that pleasure is inherently political.

Israeli diplomatic representatives also acknowledged this. We view culture as a first-class propaganda tool, according to Nissim Ben-Shitrit of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2005. Ido Aharoni, a second Israeli diplomat, put it more bluntly: “It is more important for Israel to be attractive than to be right.”

Exporting Israeli “culture” accomplishes what Israel’s military officials can’t: it promotes occupation as a way of life and demonstrates that violence can coexist with normalcy, even fun.

It provides a chance to “lose yourself” while denouncing genocide in Israel, which is catharsis without confrontation. Palestinians are not just excluded in these settings; they are also perceived as stifling another person’s peace.

It portrays Israelis as carefree and liberal, a fantasy that Western audiences can enjoy guilt-free. Palestinians are referred to as “one of us” who spoil the party, while Israelis are treated as such.

glittery hasbara

Literally speaking, keeping this party going is a national project. Israel has invested millions of dollars into promoting itself as a haven for decades.

Consider Brand Israel. It was a state-engineered rebrand that replaced checkpoints with beaches and bikinis when it was launched in 2006.

Ido Aharoni, a diplomat, assembled a top team that included representatives from Burson-Marsteller, a notorious PR firm for dishing out Union Carbide and the Argentinian junta following the Bhopal disaster. As Aharoni remarked, the goal was to make Israel more attractive than to make it right. It is obvious decency was not the case when the most ruthless of reputation-launderers were in charge.

A Maxim spread for the American male gaze titled “Women of the Israeli Defence Forces,” featuring recently crowned “Miss Israel” Gal Gadot in lingerie, was one of Brand Israel’s first stunts. We might have referred to it as “settler colonialism does thirst traps” had it come into being in 2025.

Brand Israel replaced lingerie with pride parades as that wore on. The Israeli Tourism Board had already spent about $100 million to promote Tel Aviv as a “gay vacation destination” by the year 2011.

Pinkwashing has since become state policy, and Tel Aviv still harbors glitter. It sells the myth that Israel protects queer Palestinians by portraying Palestinians as desirable and Palestinians as backward. It’s a neat colonial trick, according to Elias Jahshan: bombs that are wrapped in rainbow paper or, as it is now, those that Israel favors to instill fear in a particular regional minority to cause division.

dancing on bones

When the parties, parades, and festivals are removed, it becomes clear that Israel has used it as a political tool. And it is not the first time that apartheid South Africa has done the same, playing cricket matches there and visiting Sun City to hide colonial rule.

Locals are now complaining about Israeli travelers in Goa, just like they do elsewhere, with entire Reddit threads dedicated to their sense of privilege. They claim that Israelis regard their enjoyment as a birthright, just as they regard Palestine as a tributary of their existence.

I was one of the witnesses. I overheard Israelis, who were living nearby French Hill, an illegal Israeli settlement next to the Shu’fat refugee camp in occupied East Jerusalem, saying, “Why can’t we just have fun? “

That expression perfectly captures the fractured state of Israeli society: savoring peace while engaging in war, insisting on enjoyment while erasing others is frequently delivered in a faux-American accent. Joy transforms into an apartheid system, just like the nation itself. One person’s sanity is given over to another, and the world is given the privilege of a lifetime of indulgences that are passed on as harmless escapism.

Sun City was a part of apartheid in South Africa. While napalm fell on Vietnam, Woodstock was in America. Tel Aviv Pride and Goa are present in Israel. They assert that their joy demonstrates their innocence. However, the joy created by others’ bones was never and will never last.