2ème édition de My French Film Festival : la sélection !

Du 12 janvier au 1er février, My French Film Festival passera la seconde ! Il ne vous reste donc que quelques jours pour faire votre programme parmi les 12 longs et courts métrages sélectionnés.

Participer à un festival sans bouger de chez soi, c’est possible grâce à My French Film Festival, dont la deuxième édition se déroulera du 12 janvier au 1er février. Pendant près de 3 semaines, vous pourrez faire partager votre amour du cinéma français avec les internautes du monde entier, et découvrir la jeune création hexagonale sur la toile, à travers les 10 longs et courts métrages de la compétition, et voter pour élire ceux à qui seront notamment remis le Prix des Internautes et le Prix des réseaux sociaux, les lauréats gagnant en plus la possibilité d’être diffusés dans les avions Air France sur une durée de 6 à 9 mois, à compter du 1er mai 2012. Pour plus d’informations (les tarifs notamment), rendez-vous sur le site du festival. Et pour la sélection, c’est juste en-dessous !

Longs métrages en compétition

– Belle épine

– Case départ

– D’amour et d’eau fraîche

– Entre nos mains

– Huit fois debout

– J’aime regarder les filles

– La Reine des pommes

– Memory Lane

– Pauline et François

– Un poison violent

Courts métrages en compétition

– Aglaée

– C’est à Dieu qu’il faut le dire

– Cul de bouteille

– Dripped

– J’aurais pu être une pute

– L’Accordeur

– Le Meilleur ami de l’homme

– Monsieur l’abbé

– Petit tailleur

– Le Silence sous l’écorce

Films hors-compétition

– La Traversée de Paris

– La Vérité

– Trotteur

Maximilien Pierrette

Click Here: cheap nsw blues jersey

“Empire State” : Dwayne Johnson et Liam Hemsworth braqueurs !

Dwayne Johnson et Liam Hemsworth se donneront la réplique et se passeront les armes dans “Empire State”, thriller inspiré de l’histoire (vraie) d’un énorme braquage survenu à New York en 1982.

Cet été, ils s’affronteront par film d’action interposé (G.I. Joe 2 pour l’un, Expendables 2 pour l’autre). Mais à ce moment-là, Dwayne Johnson et Liam Hemsworth seront peut-être devenus potes sur le tournage d’Empire State, qui doit débuter en avril. Dans des rôles pour l’instant inconnus (même si on peut se douter de leur teneur), les deux acteurs se donneront en effet la réplique dans ce thriller signé Dito Montiel (rien à voir avec Bernard), qui reviendra sur l’histoire vraie de ce braquage de fourgons blindés survenu en 1982 à New York et considéré, à l’époque, comme le plus important jamais subi par les Etats-Unis. Si, comme on s’en doute, les comédiens se trouvent du mauvais côté de la loi, on souhaite bonne chance et ceux qui tenteront d’arrêter ces masses de muscles.

Click Here: cheap nsw blues jersey

Maximilien Pierrette avec Deadline

Neville reveals only Man Utd signing Fergie asked players’ opinion on

The only time Sir Alex Ferguson asked his players’ opinion on a potential Man Utd signing was before the club signed Louis Saha, according to Gary Neville.

Saha scored 42 goals in 124 matches for Manchester United as he helped the club win two Premier League titles, a League Cup and a Champions League.

Neville had played against Saha on several occasions before and Ferguson asked him and other Man Utd defenders their opinion on potentially signing the Frenchman.


FEATURE: Premier League XIs: The 1993/94 headliners…


Neville told Sky Sports: “Sir Alex never asked us which players we should sign or never asked us information about players he was going to sign. After we played Fulham one time in the FA Cup, he actually asked us as defenders would we sign Louis Saha and we all said ‘yes’ straight away.

“I do remember this season where he was playing up front with Wazza [Wayne Rooney] in 2006 and it was absolutely unbelievable, he was amazing.

“And Louis was a brilliant, brilliant player. He gave me absolute nightmares when I used to play against him when he played for Fulham. Him and Luis Boa Morte.”

Neville has been busy on Sky Sports’ The Football Show this week calling Scunthorpe chairman Peter Swann’s comments that players’ wages should be suspended “disgusting”.

Neville said: “I think it’s bordering on disgusting, Geoff [Shreeves]. It doesn’t help at all in the way football is perceived by fans, it doesn’t help the way football is perceived by players.

“I pay people in my hotels to look after guests, they are not doing it at the moment. What do I do? Just chuck them out on the street? Say sorry your income is gone now? That is not how we treat people in every other industry.”

 

The F365 Show is on hiatus until the football returns. Subscribe now ready for its glorious comeback. In the meantime, listen to the latest episode of Planet Football’s 2000s podcast, The Broken Metatarsal.

Barcelona legend Iniesta gives view on possible Liverpool title denial

Barcelona midfielder Andres Iniesta thinks it will be “very hard” on Liverpool if they are denied their Premier League title this season.

Liverpool have built a 25-point lead at the top of the Premier League this season with Jurgen Klopp’s side close to winning the club’s first English top-flight title for 30 years.

The Premier League has been suspended indefinitely because of the coronavirus pandemic with some rumours that the league could be cancelled.


FEATURE: Every Premier League club’s best free transfer signing


When asked about Liverpool’s hopes of winning the Premier League title, Iniesta said (via HITC): “I suppose there will be rules that decide [outcomes] one way or another in exceptional circumstances, but it’s a difficult situation. It must be very hard [for teams like Liverpool, who may be denied a title].

“Or a second division team on the verge of being promoted, told this season is null and void, that it doesn’t count. Or, the other way round: a team in the relegation zone is saved. Pfff. I don’t know how you resolve it.”

 

The F365 Show is on hiatus until the football returns. Subscribe now ready for its glorious comeback. In the meantime, listen to the latest episode of Planet Football’s 2000s podcast, The Broken Metatarsal.

Levy asks former Spurs boss Pochettino to take a pay cut

Spurs chairman Daniel Levy has reportedly approached former manager Mauricio Pochettino in attempt to get him to reduce his salary amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The Argentinian was sacked in November after five years in the job following Tottenham’s slump in form, before being swiftly replaced by Jose Mourinho.

Pochettino took the north London club to the Champions League final last season, where they were beaten by Liverpool in Madrid.


FEATURE: Every Premier League club’s best free transfer signing


Spurs are still paying Pochettino following his sacking and in light of the coronavirus pandemic are encouraging him to take a pay cut.

The Daily Mail claims that Pochettino has been contacted ‘about taking a wage reduction on his £8.5million salary’.

The report adds:

‘The north London club have opened talks with their former manager, who is currently on gardening leave following his sacking last year, with a view to agreeing a new pay agreement.’

As well as Pochettino, Tottenham are ‘locked in talks with their playing squad and Pochettino’s replacement Jose Mourinho about a wage reduction agreement.’

Pochettino has been heavily linked with moves to coach a number of clubs since he was fired – including Manchester United, Real Madrid and Manchester City – but is yet to fill a role.

On leaving Tottenham in November, Pochettino issued a statement: “I would like to thank Joe Lewis and Daniel Levy for giving me the opportunity to be part of Tottenham Hotspur’s history.

“I would like to thank also everyone I met at Tottenham, all the club staff and the football players during these five and a half years.

“Finally I would like to give a special mention to the fans who make this club so great with their fantastic support.

“I gave the best of me to accomplish the objectives I was asked for in our first meeting. There were equally tough challenges as exciting success.

“Best wishes for the future, I am sure we will cross paths again.”

 

The F365 Show is on hiatus until the football returns. Subscribe now ready for its glorious comeback. In the meantime, listen to the latest episode of Planet Football’s 2000s podcast, The Broken Metatarsal.

Click Here: racing club camiseta

Carra reveals four stars who ‘went straight in’ his World XI

Jamie Carragher has explained which four players “went straight in” to his World XI team.

Carragher challenged social media to name their best XI of players from their lifetime, but without using the same club or country more than once.

Steven Gerrard offered his effort on Sky Sports on Thursday but reserved particular praise for Manchester United legend Roy Keane.

Carragher also named Keane – and Gerrard – in his side, with the pundit using four building blocks to begin with.

“There were four or five players that had to be in my team,” he said. “Franco Baresi went straight in, Stevie went straight in, Lionel Messi went in and so did Neville Southall so I had those four and worked around it.


FEATURE: Six player v pundit feuds to make Pogba and Souness blush


“We’ve all played in games as players where you almost feel like there’s no hope of getting a goal or going on to win. When you had Stevie in your team, you always had belief that something could happen or change in a game. Stevie helped so many other players and individuals, too. Michael Owen, Luis Suarez, Fernando Torres; three world-class forwards and they all loved playing with him.

“Lothar Matthaus was in at one stage, I couldn’t quite get Arjen Robben in and I had Zidane in at one stage, too. There was a lot of chopping and changing but I’ve got there, starting with those four – and putting a few other legends around them!”

 

The F365 Show is on hiatus until the football returns. Subscribe now ready for its glorious comeback. In the meantime, listen to the latest episode of Planet Football’s 2000s podcast, The Broken Metatarsal.

8 Things We Learned From Attorney General William Barr's Remarks

WASHINGTON, DC — Attorney General William Barr took questions Tuesday on everything from special counsel Robert Mueller’s report on the Russia investigation to Obamacare. Barr’s meeting with the House appropriations subcommittee was his first public appearance since he released his conclusions of Mueller’s findings.

Barr tried to keep the hearing focused on the Justice Department’s proposed $29.2 billion budget, The New York Times reported, but the gravity of the Mueller report left Democrats pushing for answers. Democrats previously demanded to see the full report, as well as its underlying evidence, while Trump and his Republican allies have pushed back.

Here are eight things we learned from Barr’s answers.

1. Barr said he will deliver the Mueller report to Congress “within a week,” but lawmakers will not see the report unredacted, as Democrats had hoped. Lawmakers and the public will see the same report.

“I don’t intend at this stage to send the full unredacted report to the committee,” Barr said, according to CNN.

2. Those redactions will be color-coded and notes will explain why the material was redacted.

3. It’s unclear whether the White House was briefed on what’s in the Mueller report in addition to Barr’s summary.

When asked by Democratic U.S. Rep. Nita Lowey, Barr replied “I’ve said what I’m going to say about the report today. I’ve issued three letters about it. I was willing to discuss the historic information of how the report came to me and my decision on Sunday.”

4. Barr seemed to be open to the idea of allowing the chairmen of the Senate and House Judiciary Committees to see the unredacted version.

5. The Justice Department’s inspector general expects to complete its examination on certain aspects of the Russia probe by May or June.

6. Barr believes he handled the Mueller report correctly and warned about the consequences of hasty summarizing.

“I was not interested in putting out summaries or trying to summarize because I think any summary, regardless of who prepares it, not only runs the risk of being under-inclusive or over-inclusive, but also would trigger a lot of discussion and analysis that really should await everything coming out at once,” said Barr.

7. Barr does not plan to ask a federal judge to allow secret grand jury information.

“The chairman of the Judiciary Committee is free to go to court if he feels one of those exceptions is applicable,” said Barr.

He added: “My intention is not to ask for it at this stage. I mean, if the chairman has a good explanation of why 6(e) does not apply and his need for the information, I’m willing to listen.”

8. Barr doesn’t appear confident that the Trump administration will be able to declare the Affordable Care Act unconstitutional, according to Vox. When asked by Democratic lawmakers to defend the administration’s new position, Barr gave a confusing answer that seemed to indicate he didn’t think the government could win the case.

In response to a question by Democratic Rep. Matt Cartwright, Barr asked, “Do you think it’s likely we are going to prevail?”

“Well, you’re devoting scarce resources of your department toward that effort, are you not, Attorney General?” Cartwright replied.

“We’re in litigation. We have to take a position,” Barr said.

I’m just saying that if you think it’s such an outrageous position, you have nothing to worry about. Let the courts do their job.”

Cartwright tweeted that he interpreted the answer to say: “‘Relax. We’re not really expecting to win this case!'”

Measles Outbreak Shows Difficulty Balancing Rights, Public Good

By Katherine Drabiak, University of South Florida/The Conversation

The measles outbreaks continue to spread, with New York City declaring a public health emergency and requiring people in four ZIP codes to have their children vaccinated or face penalties, including a fine of US$1,000 and or imprisonment.

Since September 2018, 285 measles cases have been reported in Brooklyn and Queens, mainly in neighborhoods where ultra-Orthodox Jews have chosen to not have their children vaccinated.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said that from Jan. 1 to April 4, 2019, 465 individual cases of measles have been confirmed in 19 states. This is the second-highest number of cases since the CDC declared measles eliminated in 2000; in 2014, 667 cases occurred.

Cases have still been occurring each year, often brought into the United States from international travelers. Officials believe that to be the cause of the outbreak in Rockland County, New York, where 168 cases were reported as of April 8, 2019.

Rockland public health officials issued a ban that would keep unvaccinated children out of public places, but a judge overruled that on April 5. On April 9, county officials said they would appeal.

But there are limits to what health care providers, public health officials and legislators can do. It is crucial to consider both the power – and the limits – of potential solutions that will provide education, medical care and protection for the public while still upholding principles of informed consent, parental decision-making and sustaining public trust.

As a professor who researches and teaches health law, public health law and medical ethics, I think it’s worth clarifying what states can or cannot legally do when responding to cases of communicable disease.

A right to refuse medical care

The law recognizes the right of an individual to refuse medical interventions. Health law has a strong history of recognizing bodily integrity: Adults can choose whether to accept or reject a proposed medical intervention, even in instances where public health authorities conclude a vaccine would benefit both the individual and society. The Supreme Court has recognized parents’ ability to direct the care and control of their children, including consenting or forgoing medical treatment for their child except in very specific circumstances.

In the 1905 Jacobson v. Massachusetts case, the Supreme Court upheld a state law delegating power to local health officials mandating that adults receive one smallpox vaccine in the midst of an epidemic or pay a fine (about $130 today). Under the concept of police power, states have a duty to enact laws that promote the health, safety and welfare of its residents. Public health authorities may offer vaccines as a method of prevention, but medical professionals, public health authorities and even courts may not legally compel a person to submit to a vaccine.

The Jacobson decision also set forth limits on police power, yet subsequent cases addressing vaccine mandates discarded these requirements, extending multiple vaccine mandates to school attendance for disease not in circulation and in the absence of an epidemic.

Deferring to respected scientific consensus as a means to justify forced medical interventions in the name of individual benefit and the public good has historically resulted in some of the most egregious constitutional and human rights atrocities in the U.S. The mass forcible sterilization during the eugenics movement is but one example.

The history of science and medicine further demonstrates the fallibility of commonly accepted medical knowledge, such as when Bayer introduced heroin as a safe, non-addictive substitute for morphine, or physicians prescribed Bendectin and thalidomide to relieve nausea, only to find these medications resulted in babies born with severe birth defects.

Public good, personal rights

The law is also quite clear that public health authorities and law enforcement may place restrictions on a person’s individual liberty – including religious liberty – in situations where a person’s actions pose a direct, immediate and compelling harm to others, such as using venomous snakes in religious worship or asserting a nonexistent “right” to use an illegal substance such as marijuana when operating a motor vehicle.

In public health law relating to communicable disease, this constitutes a very specific standard: A person must have a present disease, and this person’s actions must pose a direct threat to others.

For example, health officials may seek a quarantine order or civil commitment for a person with active tuberculosis who continues to frequent highly populated public spaces until the person is no longer contagious.

Even in such a case, health authorities can offer treatment and limit a person’s movement to prevent infecting others, but the law does not permit forcibly medicating a competent person against his will.

Accordingly, legal precedent does not support quarantining vast geographic areas of healthy persons who have not been exposed to the communicable illness, but would support tailored voluntary isolation and quarantine of persons who have been exposed to, or currently have, the illness.

What health officials can do to protect children

The CDC classifies vaccines as one of the top 10 public health achievements. The vast majority (about 98%) of parents across the U.S. as a whole comply with the state law mandated schedule of vaccines for their children.

Vaccines, like any other FDA-approved product such as a prescription drug or medical device, carry a set of risks and benefits. These calculations vary depending on the vaccine, its efficacy, safety, potential side effects, the severity of the illness the vaccine aims to protect against, and the individual to whom it is administered.

Vaccine science and practice similarly evolved with historical mistakes (the Cutter incident) and ongoing disputes about risks and benefits for individual vaccines like flu and anthrax.

To promote vaccination for children, health officials may offer educational campaigns and set up free clinics for parents to bring their children. State laws may also mandate vaccines as a condition for school attendance, or require excluding unvaccinated children during an active outbreak at their school.

However, if states offer a religious or nonmedical exemption, courts have been clear that health officials and school officials do not have discretion to require the child’s parent to identify with an organized religion or reject the sincerity of the parent’s beliefs because this violates the First Amendment.

Harm to community

Public health professionals worry that parents who forgo vaccination are placing their child and the community at risk. Some have advocated that the state should step in with coercive measures such as eliminating any nonmedical exemptions for all children or intervene by force, such as classifying parents’ decision as child neglect or seeking a court order to vaccinate the child.

In my opinion, these strategies rely on a distortion of legal precedent, dismiss longstanding authority of parents to make decisions for their children, and threaten to undermine an already fractured public trust.

Cases that uphold state intervention to protect a child by compelling medical treatment generally require that the child has an illness, the illness is severe and life-threatening, and the risks and benefits of intervening are assessed.

Click Here: st kilda saints guernsey 2019

This requires medical professionals and health officials to maintain precision in distinguishing whether the parents are deciding to forgo recommended vaccines, or whether they are refusing medical care for a critically ill child. Indeed, a recent case in Chandler, Arizona, demonstrated how a climate of coercion and force may result in parental fear and refusal to constructively engage with state officials for even an ill child.

State public health officials have the duty to protect residents from illness and communicable disease, but these strategies must fall within appropriate legal parameters. Dismissing these legal boundaries or justifying unnecessary force not only undermines fundamental liberties, but in my view fuels parental and community distrust of health officials and sets back the ultimate goals of protecting the public.

Katherine Drabiak, Assistant Professor, University of South Florida

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Reckless Driver Put Gatorade In Car Seat, Left Baby Unrestrained

REDMOND, WA — When Redmond police pulled over a driver going 80 MPH along SR 520 Wednesday, they made a shocking discovery in the backseat.

A baby was splayed out across the seat covered in a blanket and sleeping soundly. Next to the child was a car seat that was being used to hold two bottle of Gatorade.

“This is never OK!” Redmond police said.

The baby was unharmed, but the man driving the car was arrested for reckless endangerment, driving without a license, and driving without insurance.

Click Here: brisbane lions guernsey 2019

Sida et tuberculose : un meilleur accès aux traitements dans le monde

Le sida et la tuberculose sont encore parmi les maladies qui provoquent le plus de mortalité dans le monde. Cependant, selon la revue Prescrire, le nombre de nouveaux cas est en diminution et un meilleur accès aux traitements permet de sauver des millions de personnes.

L'accès aux traitements abordables contre le sida et la tuberculose s'est amélioré.

Sida : moins de nouveaux cas et moins de mortsEn 2014, environ 37 millions de personnes vivaient avec le VIH dans le monde et 1,2 millions en sont mortes d’une maladie liée à l’

infection par le VIH. Mais ces chiffres encore impressionnantes sont nettement moins importantes que par le passé. En effet, le nombre de nouveaux cas d’infection par le VIH a diminué de 35 % depuis l’année 2000 tandis que le nombre de décès liés à la maladie est en baisse de 42 % depuis 2004.Selon la revue Prescrire, ces chiffres s’expliquent par le fait que le nombre de malades ayant accès à des traitements efficaces et moins onéreux est en croissance constante : en juin 2015, 15,8 millions de personnes étaient sous traitement

antirétroviral, ce qui représente 40 % des personnes vivant avec le VIH, et une augmentation de 84 % d’accès à ces traitements depuis 2010. Grâce à ces améliorations de l’accès aux traitements, 8 millions de morts ont pu être évitées depuis l’an 2010, soulignent les auteurs de l’article.Une amélioration également pour la tuberculoseLa

tuberculose est encore une maladie grave, répandue et parfois mortelle. Ainsi, 10 millions nouveaux cas de tuberculose ont été enregistrés dans le monde en 2014 et 1,5 millions en sont mortes la même année. Cependant, précisent les auteurs de l’article, une amélioration significative est constatée depuis  2000 puisque son incidence a baissé de 18 % entre 2000 et 2014 et dans la même période, 43 millions de morts ont été évitées grâce à un meilleur accès de moyens diagnostiques et thérapeutiques plus abordables. Un bémol cependant, en 2014, on estimait qu’environ un tiers de personnes souffrant de tuberculose n’étaient pas diagnostiquées.Ces résultats encourageants sont le fruit “des années de lutte contre la spéculation sur le prix des médicaments, contre les discriminations et le fatalisme“ écrivent les auteurs. Cependant, dans de nombreux pays, il reste beaucoup à faire…Dr Jesus CardenasSource : Revue Prescrire No 390 – avril 2016.Crédit photo : Rajesh Kumar Singh/AP/SIPAClick Here: gold coast suns 2019 guernsey