Thursday 16 June 2016

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Jo Cox, a Labour member of the British parliament, was in critical condition Thursday from gunshot and stab wounds after being attacked on the street in a village in northern England, according to police and media reports.
The 41-year-old mother of two was left lying and bleeding on the pavement in Birstall, 200 miles north of London. The incident occurred near a library where she was meeting with constituents, the BBC reports. Cox was airlifted by helicopter to a hospital.
West Yorkshie police, without identifying the MP by name, said a 52-year-old man was arrested in connection with the attack.
The Press Association quoted witness Hithem Ben Abdallah as saying Cox got involved in a scuffle between two men.
Abdallah said one of the men was fighting with Cox and then a gun went off twice and “she fell between two cars and I came and saw her bleeding on the floor.”
Witnesses tell the Yorkshire Post that an onlooker tackled a man to the floor and tried to take a gun from him. Moments later, a second shot was heard.
British Prime Minister David Cameron tweeted he was “very concerned about reports Jo Cox has been injured. Our thoughts and prayers are with Jo and her family.”
The official campaigns on next week's referendum on whether Britain should leave the European Union were suspending following the attack. Cox supports staying in the EU.

British MP shot, stabbed in English village

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Repercussions from the Sunday massacre at an Orlando gay nightclub have been many in the past few days. But one of the most unusual came when a politician apologized for his past homophobia.
Utah Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox, a Republican, struggled to keep his composure at a vigil Monday evening in Salt Lake City for victims of the rampage, the worst mass shooting in U.S. history. The emotional and riveting speech has rippled across social media and is being applauded by some in the LGBT community.
Cox started on a light, self-deprecating note, saying "I recognize fully that I am a balding, youngish, middle-age straight, white, male, Republican, politician... with all of the expectations and privileges that come with those labels. I am probably not who you expected to hear from today."
Then he admitted that bullying may have played into his younger years, particularly to those who were gay.
"I grew up in a small town and went to a small rural high school," he told those assembled at the vigil. "There were some kids in my class that were different. Sometimes I wasn't kind to them. I didn't know it at the time, but I know now that they were gay. I will forever regret not treating them with the kindness, dignity and respect — the love — that they deserved. For that, I sincerely and humbly apologize. Over the intervening years, my heart has changed. It has changed because of you."
He went on: "I’m here because, yesterday morning, 49 Americans were brutally murdered. And it made me sad. And it made me angry. And it made me confused. I’m here because those 49 people were gay. I’m here because it shouldn’t matter. But I’m here because it does."
Cox, who supported Marco Rubio in the GOP presidential race, continued to speak bluntly.
"And I am speaking now to the straight community. How did you feel when you heard that 49 people had been gunned down by a self-proclaimed terrorist? That’s the easy question. Here is the hard one: Did that feeling change when you found out the shooting was at a gay bar at 2 a.m. in the morning? If that feeling changed, then we are doing something wrong."
Queerty, an online magazine and newspaper covering the gay-oriented lifestyle, hailed the speech with this headline: "GOP lawmaker gets it right on Orlando attack; this Is the Republican Party we need."
Cox was elected to the Utah House in 2012 and became lieutenant governor in 2013. He is the oldest of eight children and grew up on a farm in Fairview.

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Wednesday 15 June 2016

Hillary Clinton told USA TODAY on Wednesday she plans to make the case for why Donald Trump is "temperamentally unfit" to manage the nation's economy and pledged to end a tax loophole for wealthy Americans by executive action if necessary in a preview of a second major policy address, scheduled for next week, that casts the real estate mogul as dangerous and unqualified.
In her first interview after meeting with Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders on Tuesday night in Washington, Clinton declined to offer a definitive position on one of his key demands as his Democratic presidential bid winds down: that party chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz be replaced. While Clinton praised Wasserman Schultz for her commitment to defeating Donald Trump, she noted that she had not selected the Florida congresswoman to head the Democratic National Committee, but had not “heard any conversations in the party” about making a change.
Earlier this month in San Diego, Clinton delivered a blistering speech that cast Trump as too dangerous to serve as the nation’s commander in chief due to his proposed temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States, lack of foreign policy knowledge and his temperament. She's continued those attacks in the days following Sunday's Orlando nightclub massacre, the worst mass shooting in U.S. history.
In a speech in Columbus next Wednesday, Clinton said she will make "a similar case on the economy that I did on foreign policy: that Donald Trump is erratic and temperamentally unfit to be responsible for the world's largest economy."
Clinton pointed to one example of Trump's "incoherent" economic argument by noting that the billionaire has built his populist appeal around leveling the playing field for lower-income Americans, even though she said his tax plan gives a $3 trillion break to millionaires and billionaires over the next 10 years.
She pointed out that his proposal would lower rates for hedge-fund and private equity managers by creating a new, lower 15% bracket.  "They would actually see their carried interest rate cut by one-third, making the loophole worse rather than closing it," she said. Previewing her speech next week, she said, "He's either completely incoherent or he hasn't thought one bit about his plan."
Clinton said she’ll pledge that, if Congress does not act, as president she'll ask the Treasury Department to use its regulatory authority to end a tax advantage, commonly referred to as the carried-interest loophole, that allows hedge-fund managers to pay a lower rate than other taxpayers by counting their income as investment income. Clinton will unveil a middle-class tax cut plan at a later date, according to her campaign.
Clinton’s speech will seek to undercut Trump’s appeal to middle- and lower-income Americans who’ve been drawn to his populist pledges to bring back manufacturing and coal jobs by slapping fines on China and cutting better trade deals.
The goal is to demonstrate how his rhetoric does not match his policies, which would disproportionately favor wealthier Americans, according to the campaign. The tax plan could be a ripe target since Trump initially indicated a willingness to raise taxes on the wealthy, then subsequently backed off those comments.
Regarding the meeting with Sanders, the presumptive Democratic nominee did not completely dismiss several of his demands as he refuses to concede the race to Clinton, including changes to superdelegates and for new leadership at the Democratic National Committee. Clinton and Sanders met after she carried the final Democratic primary in Washington, D.C.
“I’ve seen how committed she is to making sure Donald Trump is not the president,” Clinton said of Wasserman Schultz. “I’ve not heard any conversations in the party about changes,” she added, noting the Florida congresswoman was recommended by President Obama. "Obviously, we're going to go forward after this election with a new and invigorated party," she said.
As her campaign vets potential vice presidential candidates, Clinton gave another nod to Sanders, indicating she is prioritizing those with a progressive profile. “We've got a great group of Democrats that are progressive and who agree with me about the direction of the country,” she said, also noting that she is “just beginning” the process.
As for Trump, the presumptive GOP nominee has doubled down on his proposed temporary ban on Muslims following the Orlando shootings and even proposed broadening it. Republican leaders, including House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, have been critical of the proposal, yet they have not withdrawn their endorsement of Trump as the party’s nominee.
"It's something that not just Democrats and the press are noticing but a lot of Republicans are noticing as well," Clinton said.
"Now he is accusing our president of somehow encouraging terrorists and it is really offensive, even pathetic," she said. "And I do wonder how Republican leaders like House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell can stay silent while their presumptive party nominee suggests that the President of the United States supports terrorists."
Finally, Clinton said she still has not heard from the FBI regarding its investigation into her private server as secretary of State. "I just hope they wrap it up soon," she said.

USA TODAY interview: Clinton says she'll call Trump unfit to handle economy

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With the opening of the transfer window, clubs will have had their work cut out for them. This is especially true for Borussia Dortmund, last season’s Bundesliga runners-up. The Ruhr Valley side have already seen stalwarts Mats Hummels signing with rival Bayern Munich and İlkay Gündoğan sign with Manchester City. Dortmund have added Emre Mor, Sebastian Rode, Marc Batra and Ousmane Dembele in recent week, but now face losing Hernrik Mkhtaryan to the EPL Lost in all the transfers in and out is the future of 24 year-old defender Erik Durm. After missing the entire 2015/2016 Hinrunde due to knee surgery, Durm had a strange five months to begin 2016
The versatile Durm started 2016 out hot, performing very well against Bayer Leverkusen and FC Ingolstadt. Under Thomas Tuchel, he was at times made to play more of an advanced role as a winger of sorts or a right wingback in a 3-5-2. But as his season progressed, his performances started to dip, so much so that Tuchel decided to take him off at half time in matches against Mainz 05 and Eintracht Frankfurt.
Reviewing the games in which he played, he seemed to be not up to the task of playing Tuchel’s more possession-oriented style as winger or even as a traditional fullback. Misplacing passes in his own half or his lack of comfort with the ball epitomised Dortmund’s blip in the tail end of this campaign. Even though Lukasz Piszczek is the usual starting right back, had Tuchel not had Mathias Ginter on the bench as well, we could have probably seen a new face in the right back department this summer.
So what went wrong for Durm? Initially signed from Mainz 05 as a winger but groomed by Jurgen Klopp as a left back at Dortmund, he made his first appearance in that position on August 10, 2013 in a 4-0 drubbing of FC Augsburg aged just 21. He quickly blossomed into a talent, with his pace and athletic ability on show for the whole country to see. Under Klopp and his intense gegenpressing tactics, Durm’s outstanding stamina made him be picked over Piszczek and was one of the few positives in the 2014-2015 season.
But having missed preseason and the entire Hinrunde due to surgery, he didn’t have the time to get used to the new man at the helm. While players like Henrik Mkhitariyan and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang kicked on to stardom under Tuchel, Durm’s late start compounded with his poor form on his return and an eventual exclusion from the Euros 2016 Germany squad for the 2014 World Cup champion.
So does this mean that Durm’s Dortmund career is over? By absolutely no means. Although the former Mainz reservist’s greatest attributes are his speed and stamina, given the right amount of time and training, he too will get used to the way Dortmund play football now. With 77 appearances for BvB in all competitions and Germany senior squad callups, Durm has the experience to know what it takes to be successful at the highest levels of football.  His exclusion from the Euros, too, might be a blessing in disguise, as he now can finally have a complete preseason under his belt. His upbringing as a midfielder also would indicate that he can be coached into being a better distributor.

    Another strength of Durm’s is his versatility. Comfortable as either fullback, wingback or even on the wings, he will undoubtedly come in handy for Tuchel during the course of the next campaign. Piszczek, now at 31 years of age is in the twilight of his career and a worthy replacement need not brought in from another club while the genius of Durm lies still in the Ruhr valley.

    SHOULD BORUSSIA DORTMUND STICK WITH ERIK DURM?

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    Tuesday 14 June 2016

    The long reign of the baby boomers is over. The millennial generation is now the United States’ largest living generation, according to figures from the U.S. Census Bureau
    There are now 75.4 million millennials—people born during the period from 1981 and 1997—who were between the ages of 18 and 34 in 2015. They edged past the country’s 74.9 million baby boomers, the generation born after World War II, who range in age from 51 to 69.
    “Millennials are kind of their own culture,” said William Frey, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution author of Diversity Explosion. “They’re already being noticed because of their size and their unique attributes but, for the most part, they’re not yet in positions of power so that will occur in the next 10 or 15 years and when that happens, they’ll make a marked change.”
    Millennials are the best-educated U.S. generation to date. They’re more likely to be politically independent, rather than Republican or Democrat, and they’re much more socially liberal, accepting things like gay marriage to a much greater degree than earlier generations.
    The United States might have a history of isolationism but, with this new generation, that’s likely to be all in the past.
    “Because they’re more racially diverse and many of their parents were born outside the United States, they are more familiar and more adept at interacting with people from other cultures and other backgrounds,” Frey said. “This much more diverse, kind-of international generation…is going to have a much more global reach. It’s going to make us better able and better equipped to persist and succeed in a global economy.”
    Before the ascendance of the millennials, baby boomers, who were born between 1946 and 1964, ruled as the largest living U.S. generation and wielded a great deal of cultural, economic and political influence.
    The baby boomers peaked at 78.8 million in 1999, as boomers born in other countries continued to swell their ranks. The millennials are expected to surpass that number in 2036 at 81.1 million.
    But don’t expect the rabble-rousing generation that expanded racial diversity and advanced women’s rights to shuffle quietly into gray-haired obscurity. They might not be inclined to give up position, power and influence without a fight.
    “They may tend to get a little bit ornery as they get older,” Frey said. “I think enough of them will revive some of their earlier ideas and rebelliousness as they get into old age, in good ways, and they may be able to partner with millennials to make that change come about. But it could be rough for a few years.”

    US Millennials Beat Baby Boomers as Largest Living Generation

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    Monday 13 June 2016

    There isn’t anything in state or U.S. law that would have prevented the Orlando shooter from legally purchasing the weapons that authorities said he bought just days before he set out to conduct the worst mass shooting in U.S. history, legal experts say.
    Federal authorities say that Omar Mateen was armed with a Sig Sauer .221 assault weapon and aGlock17 that he purchased from a Florida gun store on consecutive days about a week before the rampage. A handgun that authorities believe Mateen may have used in his job as a security guard was also found by law enforcement officials in his car, but was not used in the mass shooting.
    Mateen had twice previously been on the FBI’s radar on suspicions of terrorist activity, but was not on the FBI’s large terror watch list database at the time of Sunday’s attack at a gay nightclub that left 49 victims dead and dozens more wounded, according to authorities.
    Despite his past brushes with the FBI, the law allowed for Mateen, who worked as an armed security guard, to legally purchase weapons.
    Membership or suspicion of membership in a terrorist organization does not prohibit a person from possessing firearms or explosives under current federal law, but the FBI is notified when a firearm or explosives background check involves an individual on the terrorist watchlist, according to the Government Accountability Office. Suspected terrorists purchased more than 2,000 weapons between 2004 and 2014, according to the GAO.

    Current law couldn't stop gun sales to Orlando shooter, experts say

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    OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Suspended Golden State Warriors star Draymond Green planned to watch Game 5 of the NBA Finals on Monday night in a baseball suite next door to Oracle Arena at the Oakland Coliseum, where the Athletics are playing the Texas Rangers.
    The Warriors said Green changed his mind several times Monday morning before deciding on a plan. The A's even extended Green an invitation to throw out the ceremonial first pitch, but he declined.
    "He would like to keep a low profile," A's spokeswoman Catherine Aker said.
    The defending champion Warriors held a 3-1 lead against LeBron James and Cleveland in their best-of-seven series and were trying to close out a second straight title against the Cavaliers — this time in front of their raucous home fans.
    "It's another test," guard Shaun Livingston said of playing without emotional leader Green. "We've went through a lot of tests this year. It's kind of the ultimate being in the position that we're in, so it's a great opportunity for a lot of guys and for our team and coaches. ... It's a cohesion thing throughout the whole team. We rely on our chemistry, we rely on each other, we play for each other. One guy is not just going to make up what Draymond brings to the table. It's all the little things he does that wins championships."
    Green was suspended by the NBA on Sunday for a fourth-quarter scuffle with James in Game 4, during which the league said Green "made unnecessary contact with a retaliatory swipe of his hand to the groin" of James. Green was issued a retroactive Flagrant-1 foul for his fourth flagrant point of the postseason, drawing an automatic suspension.
    James said Green's trash talk also went "a little bit outside of basketball."
    After Monday's game, Green will be allowed to enter Oracle Arena to either celebrate with his teammates or prepare for a trip to Ohio for Game 6. Hallways connect the side-by-side venues, providing Green an ideal option to stay close by.
    Smiling and being playful, Green was his upbeat, high-energy self — or at least appeared so — during a shootaround Monday morning at the team's downtown practice facility. He pulled off a set of pushups between taking shots, let out a loud "Ahhhhh!" for all to hear and animatedly pointed his right arm in the direction of center Andrew Bogut before disappearing as the Warriors wrapped up their day-of-game preparations.
    While coach Steve Kerr has advised all of his players to stay ready because there might be some varying lineups and rotations, Livingston said Green hadn't addressed the team. There's a lot of production to make up for without Green's postseason 15.3 points, team-high 9.6 rebounds and six assists — not to mention his defense.
    "It's tough. He's in a different position now," Livingston said. "Usually he's able to be vocal and then go out and then go out and set the example. Now with him not playing, it's kind of speaking from a different position. Steve has been great kind of feeding us what we need. I don't think we should need any extra motivation tonight."

    Draymond Green expects to watch Game 5 next door in Coliseum

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