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Trump’s claim that Nato troops avoided Afghanistan front line ignites controversy and anger

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Watch: Labour and Conservative MPs criticise Trump Afghanistan remarks

Donald Trump has sparked fresh outrage in the UK after saying Nato troops stayed “a little off the front lines” during the war in Afghanistan.

Labour MP Emily Thornberry, the chair of the foreign affairs committee, called it an “absolute insult” to the 457 British service personnel killed in the conflict, while Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said: “How dare he question their sacrifice?”

Conservative MP Ben Obese-Jecty, who served in Afghanistan, said it was “sad to see our nation’s sacrifice, and that of our Nato partners, held so cheaply”.

The UK was among several allies to join the US in Afghanistan from 2001, after it invoked Nato’s collective security clause following the 9/11 terror attacks.

The US president told Fox News on Thursday that he was “not sure” the military alliance would be there for America “if we ever needed them”.

“We’ve never needed them,” he said, adding: “We have never really asked anything of them.”

“They’ll say they sent some troops to Afghanistan,” he said, “and they did, they stayed a little back, a little off the front lines”.

He said the US had “been very good to Europe and to many other countries”, adding: “It has to be a two-way street.”

Getty Images Donald Trump arriving at Zurich airport ahead of Davos visit on 21 January 2026 Getty Images

Thornberry told the BBC’s Question Time that the remarks were “much more than a mistake”.

“It’s an absolute insult… How dare he say we weren’t on the front line, how dare he?

“We have always been there whenever the Americans have wanted us,” she said, calling Trump “a man who has never seen any action” but was now “commander in chief and knows nothing about how it is that America has been defended”.

She said the US was the UK’s “friend” but its leader had “behaved in a way that is bullying, rude, that has deliberately been trying to undermine us, which has been trying to undermine Nato.”

On the same programme, Conservative shadow cabinet member Stuart Andrew also called the comments “disgraceful” and “appalling”.

“There are many people in this country who served both in Iraq and Afghanistan, many of whom lost their lives, but also many more who came back with life-changing injuries and we should say thank you to them.”

He added that the UK-US special relationship was important for both defence and security, and that in recent weeks Trump had directed conversation to the security of the Arctic – where he said there was a “very serious threat”.

PA Media UK troops dressed in uniform and walking in a line while leaving Camp Bastion in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, 27 October 2014.PA Media

457 British service personnel were killed in the conflict in Afghanistan

Sir Ed wrote on social media that Trump had “avoided military service”, adding: “How dare he question their sacrifice?”

Speaking to BBC’s Newsnight programme, Dutch foreign minister David van Weel rejected Trump’s remarks as “false”, saying “Europeans shed blood” in support of US troops in Afghanistan.

He said Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte had rebuffed similar comments Trump made earlier, during a joint press conference the pair held at Davos on Thursday.

Asked about the US president repeating the claim, van Weel, said: “We should speak out for the truth as Mark Rutte did. And if he repeated it, we need to repeat it again because that’s not how history went.”

Meanwhile, former British Army officer Obese-Jecty said it was “sad to see our nation’s sacrifice, and that of our Nato partners, held so cheaply by the president of the United States”.

“I saw first hand the sacrifices made by British soldiers,” he wrote on X.

“I don’t believe US military personnel share the view of President Trump; his words do them a disservice as our closest military allies.”

Calvin Bailey, a Labour MP and former RAF officer who served alongside US special operations units in Afghanistan, said the president’s claim bore “no resemblance to the reality experienced by those of us who served there”.

“As I reminded the US Forces I served with on 4 July 2008, we were there because of a shared belief, articulated at America’s founding, that free people have inalienable rights and should not live under tyranny,” he told the PA news agency.

“That belief underpinned the response to 9/11, and it is worth reflecting on now.”

The BBC approached the Ministry of Defence for comment.

A spokesperson pointed to comments made by Defence Secretary John Healey while visiting Nato ally Denmark on Wednesday – before Trump’s comments.

He said: “In Afghanistan, our forces trained together, they fought together, and on some occasions, they died together, making the ultimate sacrifice.”

The US invaded in October 2001 to oust the Taliban, whom they said were harbouring Osama Bin Laden and other al-Qaeda figures linked to the 9/11 attacks. Nato nations contributed troops and military equipment to the US-led war.

More than 3,500 coalition soldiers had died as of 2021, when the US withdrew from the country – about two-thirds of them Americans.

The UK suffered the second highest number of military deaths in the conflict behind the US, which saw 2,461 deaths.

The US is the only country to have invoked the collective security provisions of Nato’s Article 5, which states that “an armed attack against one Nato member shall be considered an attack against them all”.

Air Lease Corporation Form 13G Filed on 22 January

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Form 13G AIR LEASE CORPORATION For: 22 January

US Threatens Action Against Haitian Council for Not Complying with Regulations | Government News

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The United States has issued a warning to Haiti’s Transitional Presidential Council, writing that it would consider action should the temporary governing body compromise the Caribbean nation’s security.

In a sternly worded social media post on Thursday, the US embassy in Haiti maintained that its goal was the “establishment of baseline security and stability”.

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“The US would regard any effort to change the composition of the government by the non-elected Transitional Presidential Council at this late stage in its tenure (set to expire on February 7) to be an effort to undermine that objective,” Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau wrote.

He added that the US would respond if such changes to the council were to occur. His statement, however, failed to identify the precise circumstances that prompted the warning.

“The US would consider anyone supporting such a disruptive step favoring the gangs to be acting contrary to the interests of the United States, the region, and the Haitian people and will act accordingly,” Landau said.

Haiti continues to struggle with the ravages of widespread gang violence, instability and corruption in its government.

But the US threat is likely to send shudders throughout the region, particularly in the aftermath of the January 3 attack on Venezuela.

The administration of President Donald Trump has repeatedly advanced the notion that the entire Western Hemisphere falls under its sphere of influence, as part of a policy it dubbed the “Donroe Doctrine”, a riff on the 19th-century Monroe Doctrine.

Trump has referenced that premise to justify the use of US military force to abduct Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, as well as to claim the US needs to control Greenland.

A political crisis

Located some 11,000 kilometres (800 miles) southeast of the US, Haiti has long struggled with instability. It is considered the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, as it continues to suffer from the legacy of foreign intervention, dictatorship and natural disasters.

But in 2021, the country faced a new crisis when President Jovenel Moise was assassinated in his home in the capital, Port-au-Prince.

Federal elections have not been held since, leading to a crisis of confidence in the government. The last federally elected officials saw their terms expire in 2023.

Experts say the lack of leadership has allowed Haiti’s gangs to flourish, and since the Moise assassination, they have taken control of vast stretches of the territory, including up to 90 percent of the capital.

The resulting violence has forced more than 1.4 million Haitians from their homes. Millions more suffer from food insecurity, as thoroughfares are often restricted by gang-led roadblocks.

This week, a United Nations report found that, between January and November of last year, an estimated 8,100 people were killed in the violence. That marks an escalation from 2024, when the yearly total was 5,600.

But efforts have been made to restore the country’s stability. The Transitional Presidential Council was designed as a temporary governing structure to set the framework for new federal elections. Established in 2024, it has nine members who rotate to serve as chair.

Very quickly, however, the council faced criticism for its membership – largely selected from the country’s business and political elite – and allegations of corruption swirled. Infighting has also broken out among the members.

The US too has added to the tensions on the council. In November, it announced visa restrictions against an unnamed government official, later identified in the media as one of the council’s members, economist Fritz Alphonse Jean.

While the council had been slated to hold tiered elections starting last November, it failed to meet that benchmark, and the first vote has been postponed to August.

In the meantime, the council’s mandate is set to dissolve on February 7, and the panel’s future remains unclear.

UN calls for action

In this week’s report on Haiti, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres linked Haiti’s ongoing humanitarian crisis to the vacuum in its government.

“Violence has intensified and expanded geographically, exacerbating food insecurity and instability, as transitional governance arrangements near expiry and overdue elections remain urgent,” Guterres said.

Another UN representative – Carlos Ruiz-Massieu, who leads the UN Integrated Office in Haiti (BINUH) – was also emphatic about the immediate need for transparent democratic processes and unified governance.

“Let us be clear: the country no longer has time to waste on prolonged internal struggles,” he said.

Still, in a speech on Wednesday to the UN Security Council, Ruiz-Massieu added that there have been “encouraging” signs ahead of this year’s scheduled elections. He applauded efforts to increase voter registration, including in Haiti’s diaspora, and encourage political participation among women.

But Ruiz-Massieu underscored that security concerns, including gang violence, could impede the democratic process, and that there was more work to be done before elections could be held.

“Achieving this goal will require sustained coordination among relevant institutions, predictable financing of the electoral process and security conditions that allow all voters and candidates to participate without fear,” he said.

The UN also signalled it would bolster its multinational security support mission in Haiti with more troops later this year.

Elon Musk argues that his $2.2 trillion tech empire is humanity’s best hope for survival as the only intelligent life in the universe

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Despite Elon Musk’s multiple proclamations that he is an alien—something he reiterated on the stage of the World Economic Forum on Thursday—the billionaire SpaceX CEO thinks it’s very unlikely there is intelligent life beyond Earth.

In a conversation in Davos, Switzerland, with BlackRock CEO and World Economic Forum interim chair Larry Fink, Musk said this belief is the framework of his technology ventures and  $600 billion of wealth. Because there’s a small likelihood of life outside of Earth, Musk said the project of preserving humanity becomes more urgent.

I’m often asked, ‘Are there aliens among us?’ And I’ll say that I am one. They don’t believe me,” Musk said, unclear if he was joking or what particular point he was trying to make by asserting his alienness. 

“Or you’re from the future,” Fink responded, alluding to previous times Musk has called himself a 3,000-year-old time-travelling vampire.

“The bottom line is, I think we need to assume that life and consciousness is extremely rare and it might only be us,” Musk added. “And if that’s the case, then we need to do everything possible to ensure that the light of consciousness is not extinguished.”

Musk’s vision of protecting humanity manifested more than a decade ago, when he founded OpenAI alongside Sam Altman in 2015 with the hopes of addressing the existential risks and safety concerns associated with the budding technology. He told Fink that Tesla and SpaceX, worth $1.4 trillion and $800 billion, respectively, were an extension of this belief, with the purpose not only to create sustainable technology, but “sustainable abundance.”

Musk’s vision for the future of humanity

Musk reiterated his vision of an abundance of humanoid robotics that would make work optional, claiming technology would ease the burden of humans to have jobs or even have money.

“With robotics and AI, this is really the path to abundance for all,” Musk said. “People often talk about solving global poverty, or essentially, how do we make everyone have a very high standard of living? I think the only way to do this is AI and robotics.”

The billionaire describes a world with billions of robots—which would outnumber humans—and would serve to complete tasks including caring for children and elderly parents. He predicted that there would be functional humanoid robot technology by the end of the year, and said he expected those robots to be retail available in the next couple of years. 

To be sure, Tesla’s own Optimus robots have hit snags, continuously falling behind production schedule, with Musk saying as recently as Tuesday that manufacturing for the bots, as well as the Tesla Cybercab, would be “agonizingly slow” before production eventually ramped up.

Musk has previously said humans would be able to sustain themselves without work through a universal basic income, but did not provide details on the political steps needed to provide that income to humans.

These missions to preserve humanity extend beyond earth. Musk has described his goals as “Mars-shot,” alluding to his hopes to put human life on Mars, efforts he has even touched on in Tesla’s financial filings. The CEO has previously said he envisions Mars as an insurance policy for the future of humanity, wanting to use it as a jumping off point to expand resources to explore human consciousness.

“I’ve been asked a few times like, ‘Do I want to die on Mars?’” Musk said on Thursday. “And I’m like, ‘Yes, but just not on impact.’”

The Fermi Paradox, according to Musk

Musk’s philosophy regarding extraterrestrial life has previously engaged with the Fermi Paradox, a theory positing that there’s both a high change of intelligent life outside of earth—and scant evidence to prove it.

In 1950, Italian-American physicist Enrico Fermi, an architect of the atom bomb, asked a question in a conversation with colleagues at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico: “Where is everybody?”

The three-word inquiry launched a 1963 paper by American astronomer Carl Sagan and proliferated in the scientific community, and the popularized Fermi Paradox soon emerged.

Musk said in an X post in 2023 that humans “are the only tiny candle of consciousness in an abyss of darkness.”

“The scariest answer to the Fermi Paradox is that there are no aliens at all,” he said.

In 2022, Musk even commissioned a sculpture depicting the “Fermi Great Filter,” a potential resolution to the Fermi Paradox hypothesizing that intelligent life must face and overcome a series of challenges, including the Great Filter which only few evolved species are able to overcome. The statue shows a giant fork with two diverging paths, indicating the choices a civilization must make to survive: a fork in the road, a motive Musk has oft drawn on. 

Critiques of Musk’s philosophy

The high-stakes nature associated with Musk’s philosophy has drawn concern, with some arguing this effort to preserve humanity is actually threatening it. Rebecca Charbonneau, a historian at the American Institute of Physics, had a different interpretation of Musk’s philosophy as it pertained to work. In a piece published in Scientific American in February 2025, Charbonneau said Musk’s beliefs around preserving humanity reflected a bigger ideology in the world of tech. 

Roots in vestiges of Cold War anxieties (the same time period in which the Fermi Paradox emerged), tech leaders often saw a false binary of either limitless prosperity or complete societal collapse, Charbonneau argued. As a result, many in the field, including Musk, are willing to go to extreme measures in the name of avoiding what they perceive as humanity’s demise. 

“Proponents of this survivalist mindset see it as justifying particular programs of technological escalation at any cost, framing the future as a desperate race against catastrophe rather than a space for multiple thriving possibilities,” Charbonneau wrote.

She noted that Musk’s “Fork in the Road,” a strategy he employed both in culling staff at X and in the federal government as de facto leader of DOGE, was reflective of this. Musk called DOGE the “chainsaw of bureaucracy,” promising to shave $2 trillion in federal spending. Instead, the advisory eliminated about $150 billion in spending through headcount reductions and contract cancellations. Federal workers said the cuts made their jobs harder, eliminating valuable resources that resulted in their jobs taking longer, with the quality of the government’s work suffering.

Charbonneau argued Musk’s philosophy eliminates opportunities for nuance, making institutions—and humanity—vulnerable to often extreme responses to delicate situations.

“By framing humanity’s challenges as simple engineering problems rather than complex systemic ones, technologists position themselves as decisive architects of our future, crafting grand visions that sidestep the messier, necessary work of social, political and collaborative change,” she said.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Shooting in New South Wales leaves three dead

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Three people have died and another injured after a shooting in a small town in New South Wales, Australia, police have said.

Emergency services were called to a residential area in Lake Cargelligo at about 16:40 local time (05:40 GMT).

The suspect is still on the run and is believed to have fled in a vehicle, NSW police confirmed.

A man and woman were found shot dead in a vehicle, a second shooting soon afterwards killed a woman and left a man in a “critical condition” in hospital, police said.

The Sydney Morning Herald reports that the incident was a suspected domestic violence attack.

Andrew Holland, NSW police assistant commissioner, declined to comment on the relationship between the gunman and the victims.

The public has been urged to remain indoors and multiple crime scenes have been established, he told reporters.

“Any death in a small country town is confronting, but again, a scene where you have people shot by firearms is obviously going to make people very, very tense and very concerned,” said Holland.

“The scene faced by the emergency services officers at that time would have been horrendous.”

Lake Cargelligo is located in the centre of New South Wales and has a population of about 1,500 people.

The incident comes after last month’s mass shooting at Sydney’s Bondi Beach which killed 15 people.

Sony Music acquires nearly half of Vietnam media giant YeaH1’s music unit, forming SYE Holdings joint venture

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Sony Music is making significant moves in Vietnam.

Last month, the company bought a 49% stake in 1Label JSC, the music production and artist management unit of Vietnamese media giant YeaH1 Group.

Following the deal, Sony Music and YeaH1 Group launched a joint venture called SYE Holdings, which just this week debuted a new boy group called UPRIZE.

Nikkei Asia reports that 1Label has changed its name to SYE Holdings.

In a filing to the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange on December 16, 2025, YeaH1 said Sony Music Entertainment Hong Kong will hold 49% of 1Label’s voting shares via a share subscription and 1Label and 1Talents will cease to be direct subsidiaries of YeaH1.

YeaH1, however, will retain a 49.88% stake in the business, making it an associated company. 1Label owns, produces, and releases music, while 1Talents is responsible for managing artists.

The December announcement pushed YeaH1’s stock to a two-month high on December 18. As of Thursday (January 22), YeaH1’s shares fell 1.5% from the previous trading session, ending the day with a market capitalization of 2.48 trillion Vietnamese dong ($94.4 million).

Founded in 2006, YeaH1 operates as a media conglomerate in Vietnam offering content production, media and marketing services, talent management, digital music distribution and film studio complexes management.

“Instead of chasing the ‘one-hit wonder’ model, the partnership focuses on professionalizing the talent management process and helping artists build a more sustainable career pathway.”

SYE Holdings

According to the companies’ latest press release on Tuesday (January 20), UPRIZE was introduced through their new venture, SYE Holdings, which will manage talent development, music production and international distribution.

Kenny Ong, who serves as Managing Director for SME Malaysia, Singapore & Vietnam, and Head of Special Projects Southeast Asia, was named Chairman of the new venture.

The companies say they expect the SYE Holdings joint venture to establish a “direct pipeline” for V-Pop artists to break international charts and regional playlists.

“Instead of chasing the ‘one-hit wonder’ model, the partnership focuses on professionalizing the talent management process and helping artists build a more sustainable career pathway, enabling them to not only to shine on stage but also to possess long-term commercial value across the advertising, film, and entertainment sectors,” according to the latest press release.

“Sony Music is dedicated to honoring the unique cultural heritage of the markets we enter. Our strategy is to build a ‘viable model’ for our artists’ sustainable careers, where Vietnamese cultural identity is honored and built upon.”

Kenny Ong, Sony Music Entertainment

UPRIZE was formed through a survival reality show called Tan Binh Toan Nang (Show It All), similar to the K-pop methodology of developing K-pop stars. SYE’s reality competition aired on state broadcaster VTV3 from October 4, 2025 through January 17, 2026. YeaH1 said the show attracted “millions of viewers” throughout its 15-week run.

The seven-member group — Cuong Bach, Phuc Nguyen, Lam Anh, Duc Duy, Wonbi, Duy Lan, and Long Hoang — were selected from 30 finalists who underwent 100 days of intensive training. UPRIZE will release their debut album and music video in April, followed by a second album in September, according to SME and YeaH1.

SYE plans to hold a concert with a scale of over 10,000 audiences by the third or fourth quarter of 2026, an ambitious goal that will likely require sustained investment in promotion, touring, and audience development for a newly launched act.

SME rival Universal Music Group had a similar talent reality competition in partnership with BTS label HYBE in 2023, which resulted in KATSEYE. The final lineup for the global girl group was announced in November 2023, two years after the two music giants announced their joint venture in November 2021.

Like many K-pop acts, KATSEYE was formed from a broad talent search, followed by an elimination competition that – again like many K-pop acts – was filmed and turned into a reality show.

While KATSEYE performed at various festivals and events throughout 2024, they only went on their first-ever headlining concert tour in late 2025, spanning 16 shows across North America. KATSEYE is set to perform at the 68th Grammy Awards on February 1, 2026.

Meanwhile, for UPRIZE, in preparation for the boy group’s concert, SYE plans to launch a series of fan signings, showcases, and school tours at universities nationwide to increase recognition and build connections with young audiences, according to the press release.

As part of the agreement with SME, 1Label received priority rights to sign contestants from music-related TV programs produced by Yeah1 and to distribute music content generated from those shows.

Beyond UPRIZE, SYE will also manage a roster of “new-generation” independent artists including Ho Dong Quan, Thai Le Minh Hieu, Swan Nguyen, and minhtin.

Ong said: “Sony Music is dedicated to honoring the unique cultural heritage of the markets we enter. Our strategy is to build a ‘viable model’ for our artists’ sustainable careers, where Vietnamese cultural identity is honored and built upon.”

“By integrating local creativity into Sony Music’s world-class network, we are ensuring that Vietnamese talent has the sustainable career path and international visibility it deserves.”

“When these values resonate with Sony Music Entertainment’s global network, we are not only establishing new standards but also creating a sustainable infrastructure for Vietnamese talent to proudly step out into the world with their own identity.”

Ngo Thi Van Hanh, YeaH1 Group

Ngo Thi Van Hanh, CEO of YeaH1 Group and Board Member of SYE Holdings, said: “YeaH1 contributes three essential resources to SYE: a deep understanding of local audiences, international-standard production capabilities, and a multi-platform media ecosystem.”

“When these values resonate with Sony Music Entertainment’s global network, we are not only establishing new standards but also creating a sustainable infrastructure for Vietnamese talent to proudly step out into the world with their own identity.”


The deal marks SME’s latest in Vietnam after the company formed a strategic partnership with Vietnamese music label Great Entertainment in September 2024. That agreement saw SME Vietnam securing the exclusive rights to distribute and promote Great Entertainment‘s music library, including both existing and upcoming releases.

However, SME isn’t entirely a newcomer to the talent competition space. The company previously held a stake in Syco Entertainment, the global media company founded by Simon Cowell, known for TV franchises like The X Factor and America’s Got Talent.

SME exited the joint venture in 2020, but retained Syco’s music assets, including its roster of current artists and back catalog. As MBW previously reported, acts to have graduated through Got Talent and The X Factor over the years have included the likes of Fifth Harmony (and Camila Cabello), One Direction, Little Mix, Leona Lewis, Susan Boyle and many more.

Music Business Worldwide

Is traditional TV dying before our eyes? | News

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The Oscars leave ABC for YouTube in 2029, signaling a major shift in how audiences watch live events.

The Oscars are planning a move to YouTube, ending a decades-long run on broadcast television in 2029. Audiences are continuing to change how they watch even the biggest cultural events. But reports of ‘the death of live TV’ have been premature before – so how will it survive?

In this episode: 

Episode credits:

This episode was produced by Sarí el-Khalili and Fatima Shafiq, with Farhan Rafid, Tamara Khandaker, Tracie Hunte, and our guest host, Kevin Hirten. It was edited by Noor Wazwaz. 

Our sound designer is Alex Roldan. Joe Plourde mixed this episode. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhemm. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer. Ney Alvarez is Al Jazeera’s head of audio. 

Connect with us:

@AJEPodcasts on XInstagramFacebook, and YouTube

Lauren Sexton, Double Oregon HS State Champion, Commits to WSU Class of 2030

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Lauren Sexton will head north to compete for Washington State University beginning in the fall of 2026. She confirmed the commitment on SwimCloud, writing:

I’m so excited to announce my verbal commitment to continue my academic and athletic career at Washington State University!! I would like to thank my family, friends, and coaches for their never ending support and especially God for always guiding me. Also thank you to the WSU coaching staff for blessing me with this opportunity! GO COUGS!!

An Oregon native, Sexton is currently a senior at West Linn High School, where she has been a member of her school’s varsity swimming and diving team since her freshman year. In addition to competing for the Lions, she swims year-round with Lake Oswego Swim Club, primarily specializing in breaststroke and IM.

Sexton is on a promising improvement trajectory, having made significant drops across her primary events in 2025. Most notably, she’s slashed nearly five seconds off her 400 IM, improving from 4:23.39 to 4:18.66, and taken over two seconds off her 200 breast, dropping from 2:18.02 to 2:14.53. She’s also slashed 2.56 seconds off her 200 IM PB, going from 2:03.98 to 2:01.42, and has taken time off in the 100 breast as well, improving from 1:04.63 to 1:03.78.

She most recently competed at last month’s PN VAST 49th Annual Washington Open, where she swept the IMs with her current career bests. She also added a top-three finish in the 200 breast, clocking 2:17.09 after posting her personal best of 2:16.63 in prelims.

Sexton is the two-time defending Oregon School Activities Association (OSAA) 6A state champion in the 200 IM, having also finished runner-up as a freshman. She finished runner-up in the 100 breast with her current personal best last February after taking fifth in her first two years. She’s also helped West Linn rack up six top-five relay finishes throughout her first three years: two fourth-place finishes and four fifth-place finishes. Two state titles could be in the cards at her final appearance at the meet in less than a month’s time.

She’s also a two-time Winter Junior Championships qualifier, competing at the 2023 and 2024 editions but sat out this past December. Her highest placement between the two meets was 42nd in the 200 breast in 2024; the only other time she made the top 50 was in the same event in 2023 when she hit the wall 49th.

Beyond short course, Sexton qualified and competed at Junior Nationals over the summer, placing 90th in the 200m breast (2:42.03), 93rd in the 400 IM (5:09.52), and 112th in the 50 breast (34.77). She’s been as quick as 34.50, 2:37.43, and 5:03.58 in those three races.

Top SCY Times:

  • 100 Breaststroke: 1:03.78
  • 200 Breaststroke: 2:14.53
  • 200 IM: 2:01.42
  • 400 IM: 4:18.66

A Division I program, Washington State competes in the Mountain West Conference with the likes of San Diego State and UNLV. The Cougars placed fifth out of ten teams at the 2025 Mountain West Conference Championships before sending three athletes on to compete at the NCAA Division I Championship. The team scored 14 points at NCAAs courtesy of Emily Lundgren, a current senior who placed sixth in the 200 breast and 16th in the 100 breast.

Based on the results from last season’s Mountain West Conference Championships, Sexton is already poised to land in the ‘A’ finals of the 200 IM and 400 IM, the ‘B’ final in the 200 breast, and the ‘C’ final in the 100 breast, setting her up to score big points right from the start.

On the team’s 2024-25 depth chart, she would have ranked third in the 200 breast and both IMs, as well as fourth in the 100 breast, positioning her to contribute immediately in dual meets. With the graduation of Lundgren, she could also factor into the team’s future medley relays, though she will likely focus on the 200s and up.

The full list of recruits currently set to join Sexton next fall includes fellow breaststroker Grace Carrington (1:03.74/2:18.49), Audrey Hill (sprint free/fly), Marlee Winser (sprint free), Ivy Ladrow (sprint free/fly), London Hughes (fly/distance free), and Ffion Humphreys (sprint free/back), all of whom should make for strong training partners over the next four years.

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Study Questions Link Between Heartburn Medication and Cancer

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While heartburn medication can be a lifesaver for those suffering from gastric reflux, several studies over the years have indicated that the drugs could increase stomach cancer risks more than threefold. A new meta analysis says that’s likely not the case.

Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are a class of drugs that work by blocking an enzyme that produces stomach acid. They include such popular medications as Nexium, Prevacid, and Prilosec, and they can turn down the burn often felt by people suffering from peptic ulcers as well as gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).

But in addition to providing relief to patients, some research has said these drugs may have a darker side as well. They have, for example, been linked to the development of dementia, and several studies in the last few years have said they can be a factor in the development of stomach cancer. One meta-analysis even linked the use of PPIs to an approximate three-time increase in stomach-cancer rates.

Researchers from Scandinavia, Iceland, Finland and the UK decided to take one more look at the research linking PPI use and cancer and found enough evidence to make them think it was all standing on some pretty shaky ground. So they decided to conduct their own analysis.

To do so, the team looked at healthcare registry data from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Sweden, and Norway over the 26-year period from 1994 to 2020, and found 17,232 people who had developed stomach cancer. The researchers put each of those individuals into a group with 10 other healthy people from their respective countries, matching up age, sex, and calendar year. That gave them a total pool of 172,297 people to examine.

Crucially, in their analysis, the researchers excluded the use of PPIs in one year before stomach cancer diagnoses. That’s because stomach cancer symptoms can often show up as pain, reflux and indigestion, so doctors will prescribe the medicine as a way to treat those symptoms before even realizing that a patient has stomach cancer. So in other words, it is often the case that stomach cancer patients are put on PPIs because of their symptoms rather than developing cancer as a result of taking PPIs.

When all of that was taken into account, any association between use of the drugs and development of stomach cancer disappeared. The authors argue that the earlier studies showing the link were inconsistent, and limited by confounding and methodological differences, making it hard to draw firm conclusions about cancer risk.

Still, the researchers caution that even their current analysis is an observational study from which definitive cause-and-effect conclusions cannot be drawn. However they feel the sheer amount of data fathered and the lengthy timeframe they analyzed lends their work credence.

“The results of this study do not support the hypothesis that long term proton pump inhibitor use is associated with an increased risk of gastric adenocarcinoma,” they say. “This finding should offer relief for patients needing long term proton pump inhibitor therapy and is valuable for healthcare in clinical decision making.”

That’s important because long-term untreated gastric reflux can lead to serious complications including cancer of the esophagus. So patients who avoid PPIs based on previous studies that may have been faulty are likely not making the best decision for their long-term health.

The study has been published in The BMJ.

Source: BMJ Group via EurekAlert

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