Trump Gives Presidential Medal Of Freedom To Tiger Woods

President Donald Trump awards the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Tiger Woods during a ceremony in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington.
Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP
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Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP
President Trump Monday awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom to golfer Tiger Woods in a ceremony at the White House.
Trump praised Woods’ many accomplishments on the golf course and his ability to come back from debilitating physical adversity that might have permanently sidelined any other athlete.
“Tiger Woods is a global symbol of American excellence, devotion and drive,” Trump said as Woods stood by him. “These qualities embody the American spirit of pushing boundaries, defying limits and always striving for greatness.”
With his mother and two children in attendance, Woods thanked his family, personal friends and aides in brief and emotional remarks.
Tiger Woods with the Masters trophy after winning the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 14, 2019 in Augusta, Ga.
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Andrew Redington/Getty Images
“You’ve seen the good and the bad, the highs and the lows, and I would not be in this position without all of your help,” he said.
Trump has had a contentious relationship with many black athletes but Woods has a long history with the president.
Trump has long been a fan and recently, a business partner of Woods. He announced his decision to give the award to Woods in a tweet, after Woods won the Masters tournament last month at age 43, capping a remarkable comeback from personal turmoil and physical injuries.
Spoke to @TigerWoods to congratulate him on the great victory he had in yesterday’s @TheMasters, & to inform him that because of his incredible Success & Comeback in Sports (Golf) and, more importantly, LIFE, I will be presenting him with the PRESIDENTIAL MEDAL OF FREEDOM!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) April 15, 2019
In February, Trump tweeted about a round he played with Woods and another champion golfer, Jack Nicklaus, at Trump’s course in Jupiter, Florida.
Everyone is asking how Tiger played yesterday. The answer is Great! He was long, straight & putted fantastically well. He shot a 64. Tiger is back & will be winning Majors again! Not surprisingly, Jack also played really well. His putting is amazing! Jack & Tiger like each other.
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 3, 2019
Woods designed a golf course at a Trump property in Dubai. Trump also named a villa after Woods at his Trump Doral resort near Miami.
Not everyone is a fan of Trump’s decision to award Woods the Medal of Freedom, or of Wood’s decision to accept it. Writer Rick Reilly, whose book Commander In Cheat portrays Trump as a notorious flouter of golf rules, tweeted Woods should spurn the award, because he says, Trump “thinks golf should only be for the rich.”
How can @TigerWoods accept the Presidential Medal of Freedom from a man who thinks golf should only be for the rich? “Where you aspire to join a club someday, you want to play, (so) you go out and become successful.” … Bull. If that were true, there’d BE no Tiger Woods.
— Rick Reilly (@ReillyRick) April 16, 2019
Monday’s ceremony is the second time in less than six months that Trump has awarded Medals of Freedom. In November, the President gave the award to a number of people, including Elvis and Babe Ruth.
Woods becomes the fourth professional golfer to receive the medal, along with Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and Charlie Sifford. Woods said in the ceremony that Sifford was a mentor and that he named his own son, Charlie, after him.
Effects Of Surgery On A Warming Planet: Can Anesthesia Go Green?

Dr. Brian Chesebro (right), in Portland, Ore., has calculated that by simply using the anesthesia gas sevoflurane in most surgeries, instead of the similar gas desflurane, he can significantly cut the amount of global warming each procedure contributes to the environment.
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Kristian Foden-Vencil/OPB
It’s early morning in an operating theater at Providence Hospital in Portland, Ore. A middle-aged woman lies on the operating table, wrapped in blankets. Surgeons are about to cut out a cancerous growth in her stomach.
But first, anesthesiologist Brian Chesebro puts her under by placing a mask over her face.
“Now I’m breathing for her with this mask,” he says. “And I’m delivering sevoflurane to her through this breathing circuit.”
Sevoflurane is one of the most commonly used anesthesiology gases. The other big one is desflurane. There are others, too, like nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas.
Whichever gas patients get, they breathe it in — but only about 5% is actually metabolized. The rest is exhaled. And to make sure the gas doesn’t knock out anyone else in the operating room, it’s sucked into a ventilation system.
And then? It’s vented up and out through the roof, to mingle with other greenhouse gases.
These two gases are actually fairly similar medically; sevoflurane needs to be more carefully monitored and titrated in some patients, but that’s not difficult, Chesebro says.
Generally, unless there’s a reason in a particular case to use one over the other, anesthesiologists simply tend to pick one of the two gases and stick with it. Few understand that one — desflurane — is much worse for the environment.
And that bothered Chesebro. He grew up on a ranch in Montana that focused on sustainability. “Part of growing up on a ranch is taking care of the land and being a good steward,” he says.
Now he lives in the city with his three kids and has gradually started to worry about their environmental future. “When I look around and I see stewardship on display today, it’s discouraging,” he says. “I got depressed for a while, and so I hit the pause button on myself and said, ‘Well, what’s the very best that I can do?’ “
He spent hours of his own time researching anesthesiology gases. And he learned desflurane is 20 times as powerful in trapping heat in Earth’s atmosphere as sevoflurane. It also lasts for 14 years in the atmosphere, whereas sevoflurane breaks down in just one year.
Opening a big black notebook, filled with diagrams and tiny writing, he shows how he computed the amount of each gas the doctors in his group practice used. Then he shared their carbon footprint with them.
“All I’m doing is showing them their data,” Chesebro says. “It’s not really combative. It’s demonstrative. Ha, ha ha.”
One of the doctors he shared his analysis with was Michael Hartmeyer, who works at the Oregon Anesthesiology Group with Chesebro. “I wish I had known earlier,” Hartmeyer says. “I would have changed my practice a long time ago.”
Hartmeyer says he was stunned when Chesebro explained that his use of desflurane was the greenhouse gas equivalent of driving a fleet of 12 humvees for the duration of each surgical procedure. It’s “only” half a hummer if he uses sevoflurane. Hartmeyer notes that outside the operating room he drives a Prius.
“You try to be good,” he says. “You take shorter showers or [don’t] leave lights on, or whatever else. But you know there’s always more that we could probably do. But this was, far and away, a relatively easy thing that I could do that made a huge impact.”
An anesthesia cart contains canisters for desflurane (right, with blue decals) and sevoflurane (center, with yellow decals). Both anesthetics are greenhouse gases, but desflurane’s impact on global warming is 20 times as bad as sevoflurane’s, Chesebro learned.
Courtesy of Dr. Brian Chesebro
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Courtesy of Dr. Brian Chesebro
The anesthesiology carts that get brought into operating theaters tend to have a row of gases to choose from. So Hartmeyer was able to switch pretty much overnight.
Other anesthesiologists made the switch, too. And it didn’t hurt that sevoflurane is considerably cheaper.
Hartmeyer’s change saved his hospital $13,000 a year.
When Chesebro shared his findings with the anesthesia departments at all eight Providence Health hospitals in Oregon, they prioritized the use of sevoflurane. They now save about $500,000 per year.
Providence’s chief executive, Lisa Vance, says the hospital system didn’t change its use of the gas because of the money. It changed because the World Health Organization now says climate change is the No. 1 public health issue of the 21st century — and because of Chesebro.
Vance said Chesebro teared up in front of 2,000 people when talking about the gas, his children and the Lorax from Dr. Seuss. “Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing’s going to get better — it’s not,” says Vance, quoting the book.
Jodi Sherman, an associate professor of anesthesiology at Yale School of Medicine, calls Chesebro’s efforts remarkable and important.
She says several hospitals around the country have tried to make this shift, but with mixed results. Some just gave anesthesiologists the information, and not much changed. Other hospitals took desflurane away, but that left many anesthesiologists feeling disrespected and angry.
She thinks Chesebro succeeded because he chose to persuade his colleagues — using data. He showed doctors their choice of gas, plotted against their greenhouse impact. And it helped that he showed them over and over, so doctors could compare their progress with that of their peers.
“Providing ongoing reports to providers is the best way for this movement to catch on and grow,” she says. It can reinforce over time, she adds, not just what their carbon footprint is, but also what progress they’re making.
Sherman says efforts such as Chesebro’s are sorely needed because the U.S. health sector is responsible for about 10% of the nation’s greenhouse gases. “We clinicians are very much focused on taking care of the patient in front of us,” she says. “We tend to not think about what’s happening to the community health, public health — because we’re so focused on the patient in front of us.”
In an emailed statement, Baxter International, the manufacturer of the anesthesia gas, says it is important to provide a range of options for patients. The firm also says inhaled anesthetics have a climate impact of 0.01% of fossil fuels.
“The overall impact of anesthetic agents on global warming is low, relative to other societal contributors, especially when you consider the critical role these products have in performing safe surgical procedures,” the statement reads.
It’s a fair point, Chesebro says, but he has a counterargument.
“Well, if it’s there, it’s bad. And if I can reduce my life’s footprint by a factor of six … why wouldn’t you do it?”
The surgery Chesebro was involved in that morning at Providence was a success. Chesebro estimates that by using sevoflurane on his patient, the same greenhouse gases were produced as in a 40-mile drive across the Portland region.
If he had used desflurane instead, he says, it would have been like driving the more than 1,200 miles from Seattle to San Diego.
Now Chesebro’s hospital bosses are hoping other doctors will follow his lead, research their own pet peeve, and maybe solve a problem no one’s thinking about.
This story is part of NPR’s reporting partnership with Oregon Public Broadcasting and Kaiser Health News, which is an independent journalism program of the Kaiser Family Foundation and not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
China ‘Reneging’ On Trade Commitments, U.S. Officials Say

Traders and financial professionals work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Monday. U.S. stock markets fell sharply at the open but crept higher as the day wore on after President Trump threatened to raise tariffs on imports from China.
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Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Updated at 10:00 p.m. ET
In a significant escalation of rhetoric, senior Trump administration officials accused Beijing of reneging on commitments it had already made in its on-going trade dispute with China, and they said they plan to increase tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese imports from 10% to 25% starting on Friday.
“Over the course of the last week or so, we have seen an erosion in commitments by China — I would say retreating from specific commitments that had already been made in our judgment,” said U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer at a briefing with reporters Monday afternoon. “That’s why the president referred to no re-negotiating in his tweet.”
Lighthizer said China’s attempts to re-negotiate were “in our view unacceptable. These were substantial and substantive changes and really, I would use the word ‘reneging’ on prior commitments.”
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said it became particularly clear over the weekend “with some new information that they were trying to go back on language that had been previously negotiated, very clear language that had the potential of changing the deal dramatically.”
Mnuchin said President Trump “is determined to re-balance the trade relationship” with China.
Neither Lighthizer nor Mnuchin were willing to detail the specific areas where the Chinese sought changes.
The Treasury secretary said the trade deal was “90 percent complete,” but there were still significant issues remaining that trade officials had hoped would be resolved by the end of this week.
They said the Chinese delegation, including Vice Premier Liu He, is still expected to arrive in Washington this week for talks slated for Thursday evening and Friday. At the same time, Lighthizer said he would likely put out notice of the increased tariffs on Tuesday and that they would go into effect on Friday morning.
Earlier on Monday, Trump’s latest threat to set higher tariffs on imports from China sent global financial markets tumbling.
Stock prices opened sharply lower in the United States on Monday — with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down more than 450 points — after Trump tweeted a vow Sunday to raise tariffs from 10% to 25% on $200 billion worth of imported Chinese goods as of Friday. The stocks of companies that trade heavily with China were especially hard hit.
The Shanghai composite index plunged 5.6% on Monday.
“The United States has been losing, for many years, 600 to 800 Billion Dollars a year on Trade. With China we lose 500 Billion Dollars. Sorry, we’re not going to be doing that anymore!” Trump said in a tweet Monday. (The goods trade deficit with China rose to a record $419.2 billion in 2018, but most economists say a deficit doesn’t say much about the health of the economy.)
But the stock markets crept higher as the day wore on, a sign that investors may be seeing Trump’s threat as a negotiating ploy that he is unlikely to follow through on. By the end of the day, the Dow was down only 66 points, or 0.25%.
Mnuchin said the prospect of stock market reaction was not a factor in the administration’s approach. He left open the possibility that the trade talks could get back on track if the Chinese were “prepared to meet the commitments they made to us previously.”
China and the United States have been locked in tough talks for months about trade, with the Trump administration demanding that Beijing address intellectual property theft, government business subsidies and currency manipulation.
Still, Trump’s tweets have “blindsided” Beijing officials, who were hoping the talks would lead to an elimination of tariffs, said Eswar Prasad, a senior professor of trade policy at Cornell University.
“But now it looks like the negotiations, at least on the U.S. side, will be about not imposing additional tariffs. So that changes the complexion of the negotiations quite significantly,” Prasad said.
The Chinese still have a strong incentive to strike a deal because their economy has been slowing, he said.
“The complication right now is that the Chinese cannot afford domestically to be seen as cravenly giving in to U.S. demands, which in the Chinese narrative are multiplying by the day,” Prasad added.