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Vikings and Packers pay tribute to Damar Hamlin
From players wearing “Love for Damar” shirts to #3 being highlighted on football fields, tributes poured in for Damar Hamlin during Sunday’s NFL games.
MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota — From his hospital bed, Damar Hamlin watched his teammates win 35-23 over the New England Patriots on Sunday. Prior to the game, Hamlin tweeted “GameDay.. Nothing I Want More Than To Be Running Out That Tunnel With My Brothers. God Using Me In A Different Way Today. Tell Someone You Love Them Today!”
It’s been nearly a week since the Buffalo Bills safety collapsed on the field from cardiac arrest following a hit during Monday night’s game against the Cincinnati Bengals.
The 24-year-old is being treated at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.
Saturday, Hamlin tweeted, “Putting love into the world comes back 3xs as much… thankful for everyone who has reached out and prayed. This will make me stronger on the road to recovery, keep praying for me!”
From players wearing “Love for Damar” shirts to #3 being highlighted on football fields, tributes poured in for Hamlin during Sunday’s NFL games.
During the Vikings and Bears game, players from both teams warmed up with shirts showing Hamlin love. The NFL gave players from all 32 teams “Love for Damar 3” shirts to wear during pregame warmups to show league-wide support for Hamlin.
Earlier in the week, Vikings defensive tackle Harrison Phillips — a former teammate of Hamlin’s — had dinner delivered to Hamlin’s family, the Bills training staff and the medical team working on the ICU floor. Phillips also opened a branch of his foundation, Harrison’s Playmakers, to raise money for a future event in Hamlin’s honor.
Vikings outside linebacker Patrick Jones II used to play football at the University of Pittsburgh with Hamlin. During the first quarter of Sunday’s game after Jones sacked the Bears’ quarterback, he pointed to tape on his wrist with the #3 on it.
Vikings wide receiver K.J. Osborn said after the game, “That’s my boy. I talked to him yesterday. I just told him I can’t want to see him in the offseason and I was just praying for him so hard, that organization, his family. That whole situation, obviously, was unfortunate but it brought the whole world together.”
Osborn went on to say, “Your next day’s not promised… we sacrifice so much for this game and God is real.”
Many football fields outlined the number 3 on the 30-yard lines for Hamlin, including at Lambeau Field for the Packers vs Lions game.
But out of all the tributes, the Bills found many ways to honor their teammate from flying a #3 flag onto the field to wearing #3 patches on their jerseys.
In the first play of the first game since Hamlin’s injury, Buffalo Bills running back Nyheim Hines returned the opening kickoff against the Patriots with a 96-yard touchdown.
“You can’t draw that one up, write that one up any better,” said Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen. “It’s been three years and three months since the last kickoff return, so pretty cool.”
Hines later returned another kickoff 101 yards and made history as the first Bills player to have two kickoff return touchdowns in a single game.
Hamlin reacted to all of it in real time on Twitter. He also announced Sunday that he’s selling t-shirts with the message “Did we win?” on them — a reference to the first question he wrote to doctors after waking up in the hospital. Hamlin said proceeds will go to first responders and the UC Medical Center.
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Community leaders speak out after six kids were arrested
Jerry McAfee, founder of 21 Days of Peace, said many of these kids are committing crimes for recreation and don’t understand the consequences of their actions.
MINNEAPOLIS — Community leaders say they were disheartened to see the latest string of youth crime, but they’re not shocked.
“The youth that age and younger have been participating in criminal activity long before you guys just found out,” said KG Wilson, a retired peace activist.
Wilson said the perception of kids committing crimes is hard for people to imagine.
“Nobody wanted to believe that these children this young would be doing this type of criminal activity in the community,” he said. “Instead of them listening to the few of us that we’re trying to tell them about this before it gets worse, it got worse. And then you got the taps on the hands because a lot of these kids have been doing this for years.”
Jerry McAfee has seen the same things. He’s the founder of 21 Days of Peace and works with dozens of kids to keep them on the right path.
“This behavior is not new. What is new is we are yet to be alarmed to the point that the necessary synergy is created to get ahead of that stuff and to try and stop it,” McAfee said.
He believes it’s time for a new approach.
“What we were doing three or four years ago and have been doing the last few years isn’t working. It’s getting worse. So, if it’s getting worse just stop, admit it’s not working, and let’s put something together,” he said.
McAfee said many of these kids are committing crimes for recreation and don’t understand the consequences of their actions.
“That’s the message they got to get. This is not games. This is real-life,” he said. “I don’t think there is many repercussions, and what kids deem now as fun is dangerous.”
Wilson agrees the problem is getting worse each year, and kids and teenagers need to be held accountable.
“There’s going to have to be some consequences to their actions and they’re going to have know, these children are going have to know if you do this, this is what’s going to happen to you,” Wilson said. “If that doesn’t happen, they’re going to say and think in their mind, we can do anything we want and we’re just going to get a pat on the hand.”
He said it’s not all on the parents. He said some of them have tried to get their child help, but nothing seems to work.
“A lot of times these kids have gotten so out of control that some of the parents fear them. The parents fear them,” he said.
Wilson believes people need to become neighbors again and look out for kids on their block.
“We got to start getting back to community meetings,” he said. “It’s about tough love. It’s going to have to be about tough love. You’re going to have to get tough. It’s either you’re going to let them go, let the streets have them, or you’re going to take them back yourself.”
McAfee said it might be time to air public service announcements explaining the consequences of committing crimes.
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Minneapolis 4-year-old found safe, police say
The boy had been last seen on the 2500 block of 14th Ave S.
MINNEAPOLIS — Police in Minneapolis say a 4-year-old who was reported missing has been found safe.
According to the Minneapolis Police Department, Jacob Gonzalez Orbe had been last seen around 3:40 p.m. Wednesday on the 2500 block of 14th Ave S.
In an update Monday evening, police said he was found and is safe.
This story has been updated from a previous version.
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How global warming fueled Hurricane Milton
Record warming in the Gulf of Mexico led to rapid intensification that even alarmed experts.
MINNEAPOLIS — The size and scope of Hurricane Milton is now so obvious that it can be seen from space, but the speed that it grew is what has been truly breathtaking.
John Morales, a veteran hurricane specialist for NBC 6 South Florida, verbally gasped and grew emotional while watching the storm rapidly intensify.
“It has dropped 50 millibars in 10 hours,” Morales said on the station’s live stream. “I apologize. This is just horrific.”
That video has now gone viral not just because of Morales’ emotional reaction, but also because of his frank explanation for it.
“The seas are just so incredibly, incredibly hot, record hot, as you might imagine,” Morales said. “You know what’s driving that. I don’t need to tell you. Global warming. Climate change.”
John Abraham, a professor of thermal sciences at the University of St Thomas, has been saying the same for years now.
“The warming that we’re seeing is entirely human driven,” said Abraham, who has worked with oceanographers to study and track the explosive warming of the ocean. “Think about the energy of a Hiroshima atomic bomb that ended World War II -six times that – every second for the entire year. That’s how much heat is going into the ocean.”
He says record heat in the Gulf of Mexico is exactly what’s fueling Milton.
“When we think about global warming, it’s really an energy balance problem,” Abraham said. “Ninety percent of the global warming heat ends up in the oceans, and as the ocean waters heat up, that’s what gives fuel to these storms. It increases their size, their wind speed, the rainfall and the storm surge. Parts of Florida are expected to get 18 inches of rain as Milton comes ashore.”
He sais there’s no sign of that trend slowing down. Amid all the warming in the gulf over the past 10 years, this year hit another new high. He said the implications are clear.
“We’re not going to get more storms, but the big storms are going to be bigger,” Abraham said. “We are seeing more of those big, really destructive storms because of climate change. That, along with that rapid intensification, is what scientists are really focused on.”
John Morales shared that exact concern in the wake of Hurricane Helene, he just didn’t expect his warning to be realized so soon.
“Climate change is here,” Abraham said. “We are well past the point of being able to stop climate change. But there is good news actually. We’re not past the point of being able to do something good about it. If we think about climate change, it’s going up like a rocket like this. We want to bring the curve down. We have the power to pick a more sustainable path, we just need the political will to do so.”
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