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September 14, 2023

Joe Kennedy, the high school football coach who took his battle to pray at the 50-yard line all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, said it was the “right time” to resign from the position he spent years fighting to win back.

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Kennedy, who is set to release a book next month, “Average Joe: The Coach Joe Kennedy Story,” made headlines this month when he returned to the football field after scoring a landmark religious freedom victory before the high court last year.

But right after returning to coaching and then kneeling and praying on the field, Kennedy decided to step away from his position.

“It just seemed like the right time,” he told CBN’s Faithwire, citing health issues in his wife’s family, among other deciding factors. “Also, it seemed like the right thing to do. I knew the school really didn’t want me there. They made it abundantly clear.”

Kennedy said he wanted to simply “end on a high note,” take the high road, and “retire on my own terms instead of anybody else’s.”

Regardless of Kennedy’s decision to stop working as a coach, he said he was elated to have the chance to kneel at the 50-yard line and pray at his first game back.

“It was the most amazing feeling,” he said. “I’ve had a lot of good days, I’ve had a lot of bad days, but that day was probably the most perfect day ever.”

Kennedy added, “We invited God right back into our schools and we could do it legally. So, that was just an awesome, awesome evening. I have no words except for, ‘Thanks to God for everything.’”

He said there weren’t any protestors, which he was grateful for, as he feared it would distract the players. On the flip side, the community reportedly showed up to support Kennedy, with three times as many people coalescing as at a typical game.

The now-former coach also explained why he believes the Kennedy v. Bremerton School District Supreme Court win is a victory for everyone, not just him and Christians more broadly.

“People have more freedom now than they have in the past 50 years,” Kennedy said. “The people that don’t understand and think that I did something wrong, they just need to take a history lesson. … Free speech is something that’s great in America, and I fought to defend that, and I will stand up for everyone’s right, even if they don’t agree with me and they’re protesting me.”

Kennedy will continue focusing on his First Amendment advocacy. Next month, he releases the book, “Average Joe: The Coach Joe Kennedy Story,” and a film about his story is due out next year.

He’s hoping these projects especially the upcoming book deliver a dose of inspiration.

“Ones that are on my side, they’ll be able to be inspired by it, because … there is so much going on in the world and there’s so much bad news and negativity,” Kennedy said. “This hopefully will show that, if one guy like me could stand up and change the nation, imagine what we could do if we all stand up together and stand up for our rights?”

Hiram Sasser, executive general counsel for the First Liberty Institute, the legal firm representing Kennedy, shed further light this week on Kennedy’s recent departure from the Bremerton School District, alleging the coach was mistreated upon his return.

“Well, coach is a Marine so he’s too proud, he has too much honor to tell you everything the school district was doing,” Sasser told “Fox & Friends.” “We’re currently investigating all the retaliation that was going on.”

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Sports

Sources: Rangers, Mets to swap Semien, Nimmo

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Sources: Rangers, Mets to swap Semien, Nimmo

The New York Mets and Texas Rangers have agreed to a trade that would send second baseman Marcus Semien to the Mets and outfielder Brandon Nimmo to the Rangers, sources told ESPN on Sunday.

Nimmo agreed to waive his no-trade clause, sources said, allowing the deal to be consummated, pending MLB approval. His tenure with the Mets started when they chose him with the 13th overall pick in the 2011 draft.

Semien, a three-time All-Star, joined the Rangers in 2022 and won a World Series with them the next season.

Texas entered the offseason looking for areas to save money, with its payroll being cut and four players — Semien, shortstop Corey Seager, and right-handers Jacob deGrom and Nathan Eovaldi — set to make in excess of $25 million next year. While the Rangers will actually take on more long-term money in Nimmo, who is owed $101.25 million over the next five seasons, the per-year sum is lower, with Semien set to make $72 million for the next three seasons.

The trade is the first move in what’s expected to be a busy winter for both teams — particularly the Mets. As a result of the team’s slow collapse over the season’s final 3½ months, New York missed the postseason and eventually underwent significant turnover in its coaching staff. The acquisition of Semien — who won a Gold Glove this year — aligns with president of baseball operations David Stearns’ primary goal this winter of improving run prevention.

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World

US hails ‘tremendous progress’ on Ukraine peace plan – but says negotiators ‘need more time’

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US hails 'tremendous progress' on Ukraine peace plan - but says negotiators 'need more time'

The US secretary of state has hailed a “tremendous amount of progress” on peace talks after the US and Ukraine delegations met in Geneva – but said that negotiators would “need more time”.

Marco Rubio said the meetings in Switzerland on Sunday have been “the most productive and meaningful” of the peace process so far.

He said the US was making “some changes” to the peace plan, seemingly based on Ukrainian suggestions, “in the hopes of further narrowing the differences and getting closer to something that both Ukraine and obviously the United States are very comfortable with”.

Mr Rubio struck an optimistic tone talking to the media after discussions but was light on the details, saying there was still work to be done.

US secretary of state Marco Rubio in Geneva after peace talks with Ukraine. Pic: Reuters
Image:
US secretary of state Marco Rubio in Geneva after peace talks with Ukraine. Pic: Reuters

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Analysis: Rubio strikes an optimistic tone – but is light on detail

“I don’t want to declare victory or finality here. There’s still some work to be done, but we are much further ahead today at this time than we were when we began this morning and where we were a week ago for certain,” Mr Rubio said.

He also stressed: “We just need more time than what we have today. I honestly believe we’ll get there.”

Sky News’ defence analyst Michael Clarke said on the initial US-Russian 28-point peace plan that it was Donald Trump against the world, with maybe only Moscow on his side.

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Is Trump’s plan a ‘capitulation document’?

Mr Rubio praised the Ukrainian attitude towards the talks and said Mr Trump was “quite pleased” after he previously said in a social media post that Ukraine’s leaders had expressed “ZERO GRATITUDE” for US efforts.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly address on Sunday that there are signs that “President Trump’s team hears us”.

In a news release on Sunday evening, the White House said the day “marked a significant step forward”.

“Ukrainian representatives stated that, based on the revisions and clarifications presented today, they believe the current draft reflects their national interests and provides credible and enforceable mechanisms to safeguard Ukraine’s security in both the near and long term,” it claimed.

Despite diplomatic progress in Geneva the finish line remains a long way off


John Sparks

John Sparks

International correspondent

@sparkomat

We’ve witnessed a day of determined and decidedly frantic diplomacy in this well-heeled city.

Camera crews were perched on street corners and long convoys of black vehicles swept down Geneva’s throughfares as the Ukrainians worked hard to keep the Americans on side.

Secretary of state Marco Rubio did not want to go into details at a press “gaggle” held at the US Mission this evening, but he seemed to think they had made more progress in the last 96 hours than the previous 10 months combined.

The Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy also seemed satisfied enough, posting on Telegram that there were “signals President Trump’s team is hearing us” after a day of “numerous meetings and negotiations”.

That said, we are a long way from the finish line here – something Rubio acknowledged when he said that any proposal agreed here would have to be handed over to the Russians.

At that point, negotiations to stop the war would surely get tougher.

President Putin has shown little or no inclination to stop the conflict thus far.

This, then, is the most important reason the Ukrainians seem determined to keep the Americans on side.

European leaders have presented a counter proposal to the widely criticised US-Russian peace plan, with suggestions including a cap on Ukraine’s peacetime army and readmitting Moscow into the G8.

This will only take place if the plan is agreed to by the US, Russia and Ukraine, and the G7 signs off on the move. Russia was expelled after annexing Crimea in 2014.

The counter proposal also includes US guarantees to Ukraine that mirror NATO’s Article 5 – the idea that “an armed attack against one NATO member shall be considered an attack against them all”.

The initial peace plan was worked up by the White House and Kremlin without Ukraine’s involvement, and it acquiesces to many of Russia’s previous demands.

Read more:
Who actually wrote US-Russian peace plan for Ukraine?
In full: Europe’s 28-point counter proposal to US-Russia plan

It covers a range of issues – from territorial concessions to reconstruction programmes, the future Ukrainian relationship with NATO and the EU, and educational reforms in both Ukraine and Russia.

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Technology

Google’s new AI model puts OpenAI, the great conundrum of this market, on shakier ground

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Google's new AI model puts OpenAI, the great conundrum of this market, on shakier ground

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