Cop Block – by Lorelei McFly [Satire]

News reports and social media have been flooded with accounts of communities turning to police departments with shows of support and generosity following last week’s attack on police officers in Dallas. People have paid for police officers’ meals, sent them flowers, and even taken up posts as armed sentries outside of police stations.

While officers on the street are even more tense and hypervigilant than usual, many have found temporary refuge in the array of edible gifts being brought to police departments across the nation. However, one frightening incident in California reveals that cops should not be so easily tempted to let their guard down.   Continue reading “Dusted Donuts Nearly Cost Oceanside Cops Their Lives”

Restoring Liberty – by JP Carroll

While many Mexican politicians including President Enrique Pena Nieto decry GOP presumptive nominee Donald Trump’s proposal for a border wall, the country reportedly deports nine in 10 Central American illegal migrants south of its own border.

Univision reports that Mexico strictly enforces its own immigration laws through strong border security which has led to the deportation of 87 percent, 92 percent, and 96 percent of illegal Salvadoran, Honduran and Guatemalan migrants respectively. The deportation data is valid for the first four months of 2016.   Continue reading “Mexico Deports 9 out of 10 Illegal Central American Migrants”

AP

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran’s foreign minister on Tuesday extolled the country’s ability to bring its nuclear program back on track as limits on the landmark 15-year accord between Tehran and world powers ease in the coming years.

Mohammad Javad Zarif said a document, submitted by Iran to the International Atomic Energy Agency and outlining plans to expand Iran’s uranium enrichment program, is a “matter of pride.”   Continue reading “Iran’s FM extolls country’s ability to restore nuke program”

The Daily Sheeple – by Piper McGowin

Texas Governor Greg Abbott said he wants the Texas legislature to pass a bill next year that would make disrespect and attacks on police an official hate crime, joining a number of politicians across the country who are jumping on the “Blue Lives Matter” bandwagon.

Abbott also wants to strengthen penalties for crimes against law enforcement officers even when the incident wouldn’t qualify as a hate crime, KWTX reports. Abbott says Texas, “will no longer tolerate disrespect for those who serve.”   Continue reading “Texas Governor Wants To Make Disrespecting Police An Official Hate Crime”

Fox News

California Highway Patrol San Francisco Area patrol units arrested one driver and cited another in connection with a sideshow on the Bay bridge Sunday afternoon, KTVU reports.

CHP monitored a call of 3 vehicles with paper dealer plates; a black Ford Mustang, a white Ford Mustang and a black Chevy Camaro, traveling 80-90 mph westbound on the Bay Bridge.   Continue reading “California cops catch reckless drivers who shut down SF-Oakland Bay Bridge”

Aljazeera

At least 56 civilians, including 11 children, have been killed in US-led air strikes against areas in Syria held by the Islamic State of Syria and the Levant group (ISIL, also known as ISIS), a monitoring group said.

“We believe that the raids which were carried out Tuesday were by US [or] allied planes, but it was by mistake,” Observatory director Rami Abdel-Rahman told DPA news agency.   Continue reading “US-led air strikes kill 56 civilians in Syrian town”

Reuters

When the U.S. Congress returns in September from a summer recess, it is expected to consider legislation called the Blue Lives Matter Act that would make killing a police officer a hate crime, a step first taken by Louisiana earlier this year.

Debate in Louisiana over the law enacted in May pitted police unions, which supported tougher hate-crime sentences for police assailants, against civil rights groups, which felt police did not face the historic discrimination hate-crime laws were intended to address.   Continue reading “U.S. police deaths build momentum for law to treat attacks as hate crimes”

Reuters

In a last-ditch effort to revive a White House plan to protect up to 4 million immigrants from deportation, the Obama administration on Monday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to rehear a case on which the eight-member court was split 4-4 last month.

The June 23 high court decision left in place a lower court ruling that blocked the plan, which has never been in effect. The court is currently one justice short following the death of Justice Antonin Scalia in February.   Continue reading “Obama administration asks Supreme Court to rehear immigration case”

Newser

Turkey’s state-run news agency says courts have ordered 85 generals and admirals jailed pending trial over their roles in a botched coup attempt. Dozens of others are still being questioned, the AP reports. Anadolu Agency said Tuesday that those formally arrested include former air force commander Gen. Akin Ozturk, alleged to be the ringleader of the July 15 uprising, and Gen. Adem Huduti, commander of Turkey’s Second Army, which is in charge of countering possible threats to Turkey from Syria, Iran, and Iraq. Authorities have rounded up thousands alleged to have been involved in the coup, in which at least 208 government supporters and 24 coup plotters were killed. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has refused to rule out bringing back the death penalty.   Continue reading “Turkey Jails 85 Generals, Admirals Over Failed Coup”

RT

Police discovered a hand-painted Islamic State flag in the room of the Afghan teen who attacked passengers on a train in Germany. The group claimed responsibility, but the Bavarian interior minister said evidence indicates the teen could be self-radicalized.

Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) has said the attacker was one of its fighters, according to IS-affiliated Amaq news agency.   Continue reading “Hand-painted ISIS flag found in room of Bavaria train attacker, terror group claims responsibility”

Mail.com

The U.S. government has issued a report on fuel economy and greenhouse gas standards for U.S. cars and trucks that were first established in 2012. The report Monday kicked off a two-year review process leading to a government decision on whether to leave the standards in place through 2025 or change them.

A look at the standards:   Continue reading “Questions and answers about US fuel economy standards”

Mail.com

DENVER (AP) — Police departments across the country are ordering officers to pair up after ambush attacks left eight officers dead in Texas and Louisiana, a precaution that could slow response times to low-level crimes and drive up overtime for already exhausted police.

Some agencies that normally let officers patrol alone began forcing them to double up throughout their shifts, even during meals or other breaks during their shifts. Los Angeles police assigned members of specialized crime-fighting units to back up officers responding to routine calls. Baltimore police began sending two squad cars to every call received. Dispatchers in Denver urged officers to travel in pairs indefinitely and “keep their head on a swivel” to protect themselves against the new threat. Police in Fort Worth extended the order beyond their uniformed officers to plainclothes detectives and high-ranking supervisors.   Continue reading “Police across US patrolling in pairs after ambush attacks”

Mail.com

WASHINGTON (AP) — Experts say the development of self-driving cars over the coming decade depends on an unreliable assumption by many automakers: that the humans in them will be ready to step in and take control if the car’s systems fail.

Instead, experience with automation in other modes of transportation like aviation and rail suggests that the strategy will lead to more deaths like that of a Florida Tesla driver in May. Decades of research shows that people have a difficult time keeping their minds on boring tasks like monitoring systems that rarely fail and hardly ever require them to take action. The human brain continually seeks stimulation. If the mind isn’t engaged, it will wander until it finds something more interesting to think about. The more reliable the system, the more likely it is that attention will wane.   Continue reading “Plans for self-driving cars have pitfall: the human brain”

The Hill – by Lisa Hagen

Melania Trump’s highly anticipated speech at the Republican National Convention Monday night appears to have nearly copied a paragraph from Michelle Obama’s speech at the 2008 Democratic National Convention.

Presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump’s wife was describing how her parents imparted on her values about working hard and treating people with respect.   Continue reading “Melania Trump speech appears to plagiarize Michelle Obama”

Press TV

British Prime Minister Theresa May says she would be ready to allow a nuclear strike that can result in the deaths of 100,000 people.

May made the inflammatory remarks on Monday during a debate on whether to renew the country’s Trident nuclear program.   Continue reading “May says ready to allow nuclear strike causing mass loss of life”

Kate_Brown_in_September_2015Katherine “Kate” Brown (born June 21, 1960) is an American politician who is the 38th and current Governor of the U.S. state ofOregon. Brown, a Democrat and an attorney, previously served as Oregon Secretary of State and as majority leader of the Oregon State Senate, where she represented portions of Milwaukie and of Northeast and Southeast Portland.

Brown lives in Portland, Oregon, with her husband Dan Little. She has two stepchildren, Dylan and Jessie. She identifies as bisexual and is the country’s first openly bisexual statewide officeholder and first openly bisexual governor.   Continue reading “Carpet Munching Communist”

New York Daily News – by Ryan Sit

A retired NYPD lieutenant was fatally shot by a SWAT team in New Jersey, the state attorney general and the man’s wife said on Monday.

Patrick Fennell, 57, was shot by the Ocean County Regional SWAT team after his wife Linda called police when she found him acting “strange” and drunkenly loading a revolver in the basement of their Sycamore Drive home in Little Egg Harbor Township around 6:20 p.m., according to a statement from Acting Attorney General Christopher Porrino’s office and Linda Fennell.   Continue reading “New Jersey SWAT team fatally shoots retired NYPD cop after call from wife; details of his last moments in woods unknown”

Yahoo News

The floor of the Republican National Convention erupted into chaos Monday amid an attempt by the Never Trump forces to change the rules of the event, but the efforts were defeated, thwarting the movement to stop the real estate mogul’s path to the nomination.

Delegates engaged in dueling chants of “roll call vote” and “USA” on the floor after the chair forced a voice vote, and judged that those who favored the existing rules prevailed. Colorado’s delegation even walked off of the floor in protest amid the chaos.    Continue reading “Republican Convention Floor Erupts in Chaos as Never Trump Forces Thwarted”