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‘The ultimate goal was to get at him’

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A New York Jets reporter criticized the team’s former star safety in Jamal Adams after he allowed a touchdown against the Dallas Cowboys last Thursday.

SNY’s Connor Hughes quoted the video on X, formerly Twitter, and captioned it “Yikes,” which Adams did not take kindly.

Admittedly, Adams said he stooped “lower” to Hughes by zooming in on a photo of his wife and the word “Yikes” in a post of his own.

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Jamal Adams of the Seattle Seahawks reacts during the national anthem before the Ravens game at M&T Bank Stadium on Nov. 5, 2023, in Baltimore. (Michael Owens/Getty Images)

Adams got plenty of flack, but he has no regrets on his post, which was, ironically, deleted shortly after.

“When others go low, I go lower…” Adams told reporters Wednesday.” “You can sit there and have regret. But I don’t live that way in my life.”

“It’s always the athlete that crossed the line when he responds. But at the end of the day, disrespect is disrespect, however you want to take it,” Adams also said. “So, I responded. I knew when I did hit that tweet, I wasn’t in it to win it. At the end of the day, it was to get him to understand, ‘Leave me the hell alone.’”

Adams says he and Hughes “never liked each other,” dating back to his rookie year, and Hughes’ post started a battle.

Jamal Adams walks off the field

Jamal Adams of the Seattle Seahawks walks to the locker room after suffering a concussion during the New York Giants game at MetLife Stadium on Oct. 2, 2023, in East Rutherford, New Jersey. (Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

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“He responded to something that was uncalled for that he didn’t need to speak on. And, honestly, I’ve been letting him slide for too long and I just got fed up with it. I did what I did. I hate that I had to bring her into the situation, but at the end of the day, the ultimate goal was to get at him…” Adams added.

“He’s always said some smart things toward my play, if I do make a mistake. And I just got fed up with it, bro. This was the end of it. And I knew, this only thing right here, I was going to Tweet was going to hurt him. Anything else I said wouldn’t have hurt him. But he got my point. And he knows not to continue to mess with me.”

Jamal Adams with Seahawks

Jamal Adams of the Seattle Seahawks waits for a timeout during the Packers game at Lambeau Field on Nov. 14, 2021, in Green Bay, Wisconsin. (Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

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In a separate post, the three-time Pro Bowler appeared to direct another message at Hughes by writing, “Don’t start nothin won’t be nothin.”

Adams’ Seattle Seahawks dropped their contest to the Cowboys and face the 9-3 San Francisco 49ers this weekend.

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Rich Eisen eviscerates presidents of Harvard, Penn and MIT for ‘unacceptable responses’ on Capitol Hill

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The “Rich Eisen Show” is usually sports talk with special guests in that world, hot takes about teams and players, and anything found in a typical sports talk program. 

However, the veteran sports personality took time on Wednesday to talk about a more important topic in his eyes, one that he believes he had to speak about because he has a platform to tell his thoughts and opinions. 

Eisen went on to rip the university presidents of Harvard (Dr. Claudine Gay), Penn (M. Elizabeth Magill) and MIT (Dr. Sally Kornbluth) who gave “unacceptable responses” in his eyes when asked if calling for “genocide” warrants a violation of respective campus codes of conduct in terms of harassment and bullying while testifying at the House of Representative about antisemitism on their campuses.

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NFL GameDay Live’s Rich Eisen looks on prior to the NFL Super Bowl LV football game between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Kansas City Chiefs on Feb. 7, 2021 in Tampa, Florida. (Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

The presidents responded “with a bunch of word salad and nonsense,” Eisen said, when answering the question, which concerned him. 

“Oh, so we have to wait for the genocide to happen before you kick someone off of campus? Is that right?

“By just allowing that speech makes people comfortable to commit the genocide. You understand that? By not being unequivocal and saying, ‘Yes, this is a violation and anybody who violates it is off campus.’ They can’t go to Harvard, Penn or MIT. By saying, ‘Well it depends on this, that and the other thing,’ makes them comfortable to commit the genocide. 

“It is the lesson you learn when you walk into museums of tolerance or Holocaust museums around the world, including ones that I’ve been to recently in Berlin, Germany and Tel Aviv, Israel. It’s the first lesson you learn, and I can’t believe you got to tell these people who lead these institutions of higher learning that.” 

HARVARD PRESIDENT CLARIFIES POSITION ON ANTISEMITISM AFTER TESTIMONY BACKLASH: ‘CALLS FOR VIOLENCE…ARE VILE’

Eisen added that his cousin went to MIT, and it made the family “so proud.” His brother also went to Penn, and he had countless memories with him on campus. 

Now, he does not feel his kids should be attending the universities after the comments made on Capitol Hill Tuesday. 

“It’s just really mindblowing to me in this day and age,” he said. “I never thought in a million years that I would never want to send my kids to these schools. Forget that.”

Harvard president testifies

Claudine Gay, president of Harvard University, during a House Education and the Workforce Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2023. Lawmakers on the education committee will grill the leaders of Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology about their responses to protests that erupted after the October 7 attack on Israel by Hamas. (Haiyun Jiang/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Eisen is not alone in those condemning what the presidents said at the hearing. Senators, state representatives, celebrities and many others have chimed in to give their take. 

All three presidents did not give a straight answer when asked by House Representative Elise Stefanik (R-NY), “Does calling for the genocide of Jews violate Penn’s rules or code of conduct, yes or no?”

Magill answered, “It is a context-dependent decision, congresswoman.”

Magill issued an apology on Wednesday. 

“In that moment, I was focused on our university’s longstanding policies aligned with the U.S. Constitution, which say that speech alone is not punishable,” she said in the video. “I was not focused on, but I should have been, the irrefutable fact that a call for genocide of Jewish people is a call for some of the most terrible violence human beings can perpetrate. It’s evil — plain and simple.”

HARVARD, MIT AND UPENN PRESIDENTS PRESSED ON ‘RACE-BASED IDEOLOGY OF THE RADICAL LEFT’ AT ANTISEMITISM HEARING

Gay’s answer mirrored Magill’s, saying it “depends on the context.” Dr. Kornbluth added, “I’ve heard chants which can be antisemitic depending on the context when calling for the elimination of the Jewish people.”

Gay issued an apology on Wednesday as well through Harvard’s social media. 

“There are some who have confused a right to free expression with the idea that Harvard will condone calls for violence against Jewish students,” Gay began. “Let me be clear: Calls for violence or genocide against the Jewish community, or any religious or ethnic group are vile, they have no place at Harvard, and those who threaten our Jewish students will be held to account.”

Rich Eisen

Rich Eisen attends the 44th Annual Sports Emmy Awards at Frederick P. Rose Hall, Jazz at Lincoln Center on May 22, 2023 in New York City. (Arturo Holmes/Getty Images)

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Stefanik’s question to the three presidents was prefaced by the fact that campus protests across the country have heard students using the word “intifada,” which is an Arabic word meaning uprising. It is a word that the Jewish community views as a call to violence against them. 

Stephen A. Smith gives potential Joe Biden replacement for Democrat party in 2024 election

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Stephen A. Smith is on the record saying, “We need a new president.

However, it seems President Biden is going to run for re-election, much to the ESPN host’s dismay.

Smith’s main concern with Biden is that he’ll be 82 years old by the time he’d potentially be re-elected and has shown “flagrant slippage.”

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Stephen A. Smith before the Miami Heat and the Denver Nuggets meet in Game 1 of the 2023 NBA Finals June 1, 2023, at the Ball Arena in Denver, Colo. (Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images)

Smith said in his “perfect world,” Vice President Kamala Harris would have “showed up and had more of an impact,” but that “has not been the case.”

So, he offered a solution for the Democratic Party.

“Now, here’s where I’m going: I am in no way saying that me, myself, supports this move, but what makes sense if you are a flaming liberal, what makes sense is that Biden bows out, and [California Gov.] Gavin Newsom takes the mantle and runs for the presidency against … the Republican nominee,” he told OutKick’s Clay Travis.

Gov Gavin Newsom

California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks alongside local officials at the opening of a recently completed Clean California beautification project. (California Gov. Gavin Newsom YouTube channel)

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Smith reiterated his stance on Biden while speaking with Travis.

“We need a new president. The man is gonna be 82 years of age in the year 2024. There’s no way around it. We need to stop.” he said.

“If you’re a liberal, there’s a lot of people that agree with what Biden has done. They look at the economy. They don’t think it’s that bad. They look at inflation issues. They don’t think it’s that bad. They don’t think we’re in a recession or anything like that. These are the kind of things they say. Getting folks out of jail for non-violent crimes. They give him credit for that. There’s a litany of things. …

President Joe Biden

President Joe Biden was recently grilled by The Washington Post for all the embellished stories he has told audiences over his career. (Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

“But … there’s no reason to doubt you’ll be this way for the next four years. And you cannot tell me that that’s what he’s showing us. It’s just a fact.”

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Newsom has been California’s governor since 2019.

Polygon 2.0 – 2024 to see unified ZK-powered L2 chains

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Polygon co-founder Jordi Baylina says 2024 will see the amalgamation of Polygon’s various Ethereum layer 2 scaling networks to complete its “Polygon 2.0” cross-chain coordination protocol.

Speaking exclusively to Cointelegraph, Baylina said next year will be a litmus test to see how the Polygon ecosystem’s various networks can scale and integrate through the implementation of zero-knowledge proofs (ZK-proofs):

“2024 is going to be very much about Polygon 2.0, having all these networks connected, sharing the liquidity, sharing the composability between the network with different flavors.”

Baylina added that several of the networks that make up Polygon’s ecosystem feature their own respective tokens, sequencers and data availability solutions. The evolution to Polygon 2.0 is set to include several upgrades that will unify these different protocols with ZK-proof technology into “continuous, unbounded blockspace.”

The scaling technology firm unveiled Polygon 2.0 in June 2023, outlining plans for a scaling ecosystem comprising four protocol layers. The staking, interop, execution and proving layers all play a role in creating an interconnected ecosystem of chains that enable fast value transfer and information sharing.

Related: Polygon co-founder: $1B bet on ZK-rollups paying off

2023 has been an important year for Polygon, as Baylina reflects, as several products have been shipped that have added to the performance of its scaling protocol and provide the means for developers to build decentralized applications (DApps) and interoperable services.

“This has been an incredible year for Polygon, the zkEVM was like the first big event. Also the creation, design and announcement of Polygon 2.0 with the proof-of-stake (PoS) integration and all these aggregation layers, is an important milestone,” Baylina explains.

Polygon released its open-source zkEVM mainnet beta in March 2023, which delivers reduced transaction costs and increased throughput of smart contract deployments. The technology allows thousands of transactions to be batched off-chain, with cryptographic proof containing a minimal data summary posted to the Ethereum mainnet.

Polygon’s zkEVM mimics the transaction execution environment of Ethereum’s mainnet. The open-source zkEVM allows DApps to scale through transaction batching, unlocking higher performance.

The release of Polygon’s Chain Development Kit (CDK) in Sept. 2023 dramatically opened the ecosystem to new development. Baylina previously spoke to Cointelegraph on the introduction of the service, which allows developers to launch bespoke ZK-powered layer 2 protocols on Ethereum, tailored to the requirements of their project.

A key aspect is that Polygon CDK enables automatic access to liquidity across all of Polygon’s chains and the broader Ethereum ecosystem, providing “on-demand scale, without fragmenting liquidity.”

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A breakdown of the transition of Polygon PoS to a zkEVM validium. Source: Polygon.

Baylina described the current state of Polygon as a “constellation with a single star being the zkEVM.” The transition of Polygon PoS to a zkEVM validium will expedite the scaling of the network and allow ecosystem protocols to become interconnected.

“It is complex. It’s not an easy task. Polygon is a decentralized system. So first, there needs to be consensus for the switch. Then comes moving all the bridges, continuing the network, and giving continuity to all these applications. This is challenging,” Baylina adds.

Polygon released three Polygon Improvement Proposals (PIPs) in Sept. 2023. This includes a proposal for the transition and specifications that will see MATIC tokens become POL tokens, which will become the Polygon proof-of-stake (PoS) protocol’s native token.

PIP-17 will include the initiation of the upgrade from MATIC to POL. This includes its transition to POL as the native gas token and staking token for the Polygon ecosystem, as well as the launch of the staking layer and migration of Polygon public chains.

Magazine: Slumdog billionaire: Incredible rags-to-riches tale of Polygon’s Sandeep Nailwal