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Nikki Bella And John Cena Face Drama On ‘Total Bellas’ As She Prepares For ‘DWTS’ Debut

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Nikki Bella and John Cena may have their hands full with wedding planning and Bella’s new gig on ‘Dancing With the Stars’ but on-screen, their relationship has been plagued by drama.
Nikki Bella and John Cena may have their hands full with wedding planning and Bella’s new gig on Dancing with the Stars, but on-screen, their relationship has been plagued by drama.
Shortly after the Season 2 premiere of Total Bellas weeks ago, Nikki Bella began facing allegations of two-timing after her mom saw her little brother, JJ, walking behind her as they FaceTimed.
While one might assume that Nikki Bella’s own mother would know better than to think that she would be seeing another man behind her fiance’s back, the strange rumor made its way back to Nikki’s sister, Brie, who quickly called her and confronted her about the situation. In turn, Wrestling Inc. explained that Nikki Bella was forced to tell her twin that their brother was staying with her and John Cena after separating from his wife.
Nikki Bella and John Cena’s Total Bellas drama came around the same time that Bella was named as one of the Season 25 contestants of Dancing with the Stars .
In a second report shared by Wrestling Inc. on September 16, Nikki Bella was seen preparing for her upcoming debut on the ABC dancing competition. In a clip from the show, she admitted that she often FaceTimes with John Cena to show him what she’s been learning on the dance floor.
Nikki Bella has been paired up with dancer Artem Chigvintsev, as she explained to Extra TV days ago.
While John Cena is certainly supportive of his soon-to-be-wife’s stint in the ballroom, he will unfortunately not be in attendance when Nikki Bella debuts her dancing skills during tonight’s premiere. As Bella explained to host Mario Lopez, Cena’s WWE career has landed him in China for this week’s episode, but when it comes to Cena’s future visits, Bella anticipates that there will be at least a couple.
To see more of Nikk Bella, don’t miss the second season of Total Bellas, which airs on Wednesday nights at 9 p.m. on the E! Network, and tune into the premiere of Dancing with the Stars Season 25 tonight, September 18 at 8 p.m. on ABC.
[Featured Image by Erika Goldring/Getty Images]

© Source: https://www.inquisitr.com/4504340/nikki-bella-and-john-cena-face-drama-on-total-bellas-as-she-prepares-for-dwts-debut/
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Boris Johnson has a problem: he doesn't have any friends Both the UK and EU are falling into the Brexit negotiations trap

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The Foreign Secretary’s difficulty is that he doesn’t have a natural faction, and can count on the unstinting service of just a few MPs.
In the dying days of the Second World War, the subject of the future of eastern Europe came up. Winston Churchill interjected to warn Joseph Stalin, the ruler of the Soviet Union, that the sensibilities of the Pope had to be listened to. Stalin paused, then asked: “How many legions does the Pope have?”
His point was that while the Pope might have political influence, when it came down to cold, hard numbers, he had no military and therefore no real political power. There are not many comparisons to be drawn between Boris Johnson and the Pope, but this is one. The Foreign Secretary retains a significant degree of influence due to his supporters in the press, including his old stomping grounds of the Spectator and the Telegraph.
But as far as firm support among Conservative MPs go, the number of actual “divisions” he commands is significantly smaller. During the years of coalition, his support had two roots among the party’s MPs: the fondness in which he was held by Conservative activists, and the belief that he, having won London, was a “Heineken Tory” who could win in places where other Conservatives could not.
MPs buying stock in Johnson then tended to have a low view of David Cameron’s chances in the 2015 election. Their assumption was that the next leadership election would take place in the shadow of an Ed Miliband-led government, in which the Conservatives would have gone 23 years and four leaders without winning a parliamentary majority, and Johnson, at the time the most popular politician in the country, would be the logical frontrunner.
As a result, MPs we thought of as being in the Johnson camp tended to be from the party’s right, not because of any particular right-wing convictions on Johnson’s part, but because the further to the Conservative right you were, the more likely you were to think that Cameron’s approach was doomed to failure in 2015. The biggest brain of that tendency was probably Kwasi Kwarteng, the MP for Spelthorne. But Cameron’s unexpected success in 2015 and the emergence of new candidates on the Conservative right means that these MPs can now shop around, with the natural choice for many of them being Dominic Raab, a justice minister and the MP for Esher and Walton.
Bolstering Johnson’s support from the right were parliamentarians of the most valuable and dangerous commodity in any political party: MPs Who Want Jobs. This group were of the opinion that Johnson’s popularity meant that he would win any leadership election, and they wanted to get in on the ground floor. But the difficulty with this group, as George Osborne and Andy Burnham could both tell you, is that like nervous traders, they might bolt at any point; and they did, the second that Michael Gove chose to mount his own bid for the leadership in 2016 rather than support Johnson’s campaign. (Theresa May was the biggest net beneficiary.)
That Johnson’s USP – being able to win in parts of the country the Conservatives cannot usually reach – was holed below the waterline after Cameron’s win in 2015 only furthered the drop in support: the former Mayor of London simply didn’t have enough support to stay the course on his own, though the likes of Ben Wallace, MP for Wyre and Preston North, remained loyal.
Adding to his misery since then, though Theresa May has shown that being able to win a majority is harder than it looks, is that Ruth Davidson has taken some of his oxygen as a leader who can win in places the Conservatives tend to struggle. Meanwhile, Jacob Rees-Mogg has supplanted him as the activists’ darling.
But that doesn’t mean that there isn’t a path to power, or at least a second-placed finish among Conservative MPs, after which point he has, as one Johnson-supporting MP puts it, “a puncher’s chance” of beating whoever he faces among members.
Just as in the last leadership election, where the top two candidates were MPs who had campaigned for Remain (Theresa May) and for Leave (Andrea Leadsom), it is likely that the top two will again be a choice between two sides of the party’s referendum divide. And although Johnson is not the first choice of many committed Brexiteers, he has the advantage that he is not their last choice, either.
How are the Brexit negotiations going? That is a deceptively easy question with a fiendishly complicated answer. After the latest round of negotiations, Brexit is quickly becoming synonymous with words like “impasse”, “deadlock”, and “blockage”. Yet, in another sense, it was never going to be any different. In particular, the fault lines keep re-emerging precisely where the unstoppable force of Brexit meets the immovable object of the EU – notably, budget contributions. As both sides pull harder, loose negotiation threads become tangled into what the Greeks call a Gordian knot – the legendary bundle that nobody could untie.
Worse, the current approach by David Davis and his team appears, if anything, to be tightening the knot further for two main reasons. First, while the British press and politicians focus on Brexit every day, nudged by a constant stream of leaks, this is not the case on the continent. Part of this is understandable – untangling 44 years of European law is fiendishly complicated, as the EU Withdrawal Bill demonstrates.
However, this creates the impression that these negotiations are followed closely by national leaders and that, perhaps, the UK can bypass the “inflexible” European Commission and talk directly to the “decision-makers”. This is unlikely to work. Simply put, Brexit is down the EU’s pecking order of challenges, behind topics such as migration and neighborhood policy, rule of law in some member states, security challenges, and managing the transatlantic relationship. Indeed, in the recent German electoral debate between Angela Merkel and Martin Schulz, Brexit was mentioned exactly zero times.
The second reason why the Gordian knot keeps tightening, as the third round of negotiations last month made clear, is the UK’s contribution to the EU budget. Its refusal to engage on the issue and discuss a possible methodology has angered many in Brussels. The reason why this is proving so tricky lies in the conception of the infamous Article 50. Brits should be aware of this, given the leading role of Lord Kerr in the process.
In short, Article 50 was never intended for a big member state, but rather as a quick procedure to terminate relations with a recalcitrant member state that had drifted far apart in matters of rule of law and democracy. The candidates in mind at the time were all among the new members in Central and Eastern Europe – and they are net recipients rather than contributors to the EU budget. Therefore, Article 50 did not explicitly envisage any rules for what to do if the leaving country is actually a contributor, not to mention one as large as Britain, which is responsible for roughly 12 per cent of the overall EU budget.
For Brussels, Britain is still pushing and poking for ways to “have its cake and eat it too”. The barrage of position papers, while welcome, shows that London is still aiming at a bespoke deal that preserves the benefits of membership (frictionless trade, free-flowing capital) without its obligations (European Court of Justice jurisdiction, movement of people, and budget contributions). Hence the oft-repeated invocation “no cherry-picking” that reflects, simply, the fact that the EU is not going to consciously break its own social contract to satisfy Davis.
Therefore, in this first few months of negotiations, Britain has continuously tried to push against the fundamental reasons for the existence of the EU. This has meant EU leaders have had the relatively easy task of dismissing such attempts. Anyone who has closely followed the EU over the last decade cannot fail to note that the 27 member states and the Commission have been more united on Brexit than perhaps any other topic during this period.
To begin to untie the Gordian knot, Britain should accept that trying to recreate membership outside of the EU is a non-starter. Instead, it should focus on outlining certain trade-offs – these do not yet need to be fully spelt out, but would be an important signal that the UK grasps the reality of being a “third country”. To a slight extent this has happened on the topic of ECJ jurisdiction,. It is possible that within the next two negotiation rounds ‘”sufficient progress”, in the EU jargon, can be claimed in this area. However, it has decidedly not happened on the topic of budgetary contributions.
In response to such acknowledgment from London, the EU should also act. In October, it is increasingly likely that the European Council, composed of national leaders, will deem there has not been “sufficient progress” to move to what Britain really wants to talk about – trade and transitional arrangements. In response to a British acknowledgment of inevitable tradeoffs, the Council should move to loosen the strict split of “separation” and “future relationship” issues currently embedded in Barnier’s negotiation strictures.
In this new phase – we might call it phase 1.5 of the negotiations – the focus should be on a narrow set of issues. It is increasingly clear that keeping “separation” issues apart from the framework of future relations is counterproductive. In particular, this should open the way to discuss the linking of British payments into the budget with transitional arrangements, marking a step back from exacting an up-front settlement.
This time should also be used to flesh out additional details on the current ideas surrounding the rights of EU citizens, notably acknowledging the significant administrative challenges and discussing tricky areas such as the right to bring in family members. Given the negotiation timeline, this phase however should be strictly limited to December 2017. At this point, the European Council should make its decision on “sufficient progress”.
In the end, the Gordian knot in Ancient Greece was severed – not by carefully unpicking loose ends, but by Alexander the Great deciding to cut through it with his sword. On Brexit, Britain should show that it recognizes the need for trade-offs and Europe should reciprocate via a phase 1.5 of the negotiations. Just maybe, this can be the decisive action needed to get things moving.
Ivaylo Iaydjiev is a DPhil student at the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford. He is a former adviser to the Bulgarian government.

© Source: http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/staggers/2017/09/boris-johnson-has-problem-he-doesnt-have-any-friends
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Elvis Costello, Lana Del Rey to headline Leonard Cohen tribute

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Feist, Philip Glass, k.d. lang, Sting and members of The Lumineers will also perform.
Elvis Costello and Lana Del Rey will headline a tribute concert for singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen in November to mark a year since his death.
Cohen’s family announced “Tower of Song: A Memorial Tribute to Leonard Cohen” on Monday. The concert to be held in Cohen’s native Montreal is scheduled for Nov. 6, a day before the anniversary of his death at age 82.
Cohen’s son Adam says in a statement that he sees the concert as a fulfillment of his duties to his father “that we gather in Montreal to ring the bells that still can ring.”
Adam Cohen will also perform at the show. Feist, Philip Glass, k.d. lang, Sting and members of The Lumineers will join him on the bill.

© Source: http://pagesix.com/2017/09/18/elvis-costello-lana-del-rey-to-headline-leonard-cohen-tribute/
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CCleaner hacked with malware: What you need to know

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Avast Piriform says that hackers infiltrated its update servers to inject malware into a recent CCleaner release, but the issue has been resolved before any known attacks.
It seems that CCleaner, one of PCWorld’s recommendations for the best free software for new PCs, might not have been keeping your PC so clean after all. In an in-depth probe of the popular optimization and scrubbing software, Cisco Talos has discovered a malicious bit of code injected by hackers that could have affected more than 2 million users who downloaded the most recent update.
On Sept. 13, Cisco Talos found that the official download of the free versions of CCleaner 5.33 and CCleaner Cloud 1.07.3191 also contained “a malicious payload that featured a Domain Generation Algorithm as well as hardcoded Command and Control functionality.” What that means is that a hacker infiltrated Avast Piriform’s official build somewhere in the development process build to plant malware designed to steal users’ data.
Cisco Talon suspects that the attacker “compromised a portion of (CCleaner’s) development or build environment and leveraged that access to insert malware into the CCleaner build that was released and hosted by the organization.” As such, customers’ personal information was not at risk.
According to Avast, the malware doesn’t seem to have affected any machines in the wild. In a blog post by vice president of products Paul Yung, he states that the company identified the attack on Sept. 12 and had taken the appropriate action even before Cisco Talos notified them of their discovery. Yung says the attack was limited to CCleaner and CCleaner Cloud on 32-bit Windows systems—fortunately, most modern PCs will likely be running the 64-bit version.
Yung assures customers that the threat has been resolved and the “rogue server” has been taken down. He also says Piriform has shut down the hackers’ access to other servers. Additionally, the company is moving all users to the latest version of the software, which is already available on the company’s website (though the release notes only mention “minor big fixes.”)
Most reassuringly, Yung states that Avast was seemingly able to disarm the threat before it was able to do any harm. The intent of the attack is unclear at this time, though Avast says the code was able to collect information about the local system.
Users can download CCleaner 5.34 from Avast’s website if they haven’t already done so. Previous releases are also still available on the company’s website, but the infected version has been removed from the company’s servers. You’ll also want to perform an antivirus scan on your computer. If you’re affected, Cisco Talos recommends using a backup to restore your PC to a state prior to August 15,2017, which is when the hacked version was released.

© Source: https://www.pcworld.com/article/3225407/security/ccleaner-downloads-infected-malware.html
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2017 Emmys: Watch the 10 most memorable moments from Sunday night's show

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Couldn’t tune in? Here’s what you need to know to pretend you did.
It was a decidedly difficult weekend for football fans of taste, with the Saints, LSU and Tulane all suffering at the dirty end of blowout losses. That being the case, you can be forgiven if you decided to pack it in early, turn off the TV and bed down before the 2017 Emmy Awards aired Sunday night (Sept. 17).
Of course, that creates a problem: How will you participate in this week’s office conversation, which — if there’s any god in heaven above — will steer far from football? Worry not. We’ve got you covered.
Below, find 10 memorable moments from the 69th annual Emmy show, presented in talking-point format, to help you convincingly pretend you turned in to the three-hour self-congratulation-athon. The pertinent clips are included where available, courtesy of CBS.
And the winner is: you.

© Source: http://www.nola.com/tv/index.ssf/2017/09/2017_emmys_10_memorable_moment.html
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‘Dancing With the Stars’ 2017 Premiere Spoilers: Opening Performances List

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Check out all the spoilers on the 2017 premiere of “Dancing With the Stars.” Get the details on the season 25 opening performances and the DWTS couples.
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The season 25 premiere of Dancing With the Stars airs tonight and the cast of pros on the show is gearing up for a brand new bunch of celebrity participants. The premiere starts tonight at 8 p.m. ET/PT on the ABC network and all the judges, along with the usual co-hosts, have returned. Julianne Hough, Len Goodman, Carrie Ann Inaba and Bruno Tonioli are back on the judges’ panel, with Tom Bergeron and Erin Andrews as the show hosts.
Now let’s get into the contestants and the performances they have lined up for the premiere.
Barbara Corcoran & Keo Motsepe – Salsa – “Money Maker” by Ludacris featuring Pharrell
Debbie Gibson & Alan Bersten – Foxtrot – “Lost in Your Eyes” by Debbie Gibson
Derek Fisher & Sharna Burgess – Salsa – “Basketball” by Kurtis Blow
Drew Scott & Emma Slater – Foxtrot – “Our House” by Madness
Frankie Muniz & Witney Carson – Foxtrot – “Sign of the Times” by Harry Styles
Jordan Fisher & Lindsay Arnold – Tango – “There’s Nothing Holdin’ Me Back” by Shawn Mendes
Lindsey Stirling & Mark Ballas – Cha – “Don’t Worry” by Madcon
Nick Lachey & Peta Murgatroyd – Cha – “Come Get It Bae” by Pharrell Williams
Nikki Bella & Artem Chigvintsev – Tango – “So What!” by P!nk
Sasha Pieterse & Gleb Savchenko – Cha – “Like That” by Fleur East
Terrell Owens & Cheryl Burke – Cha – “Ain’t Too Proud to Beg” by The Temptations
Vanessa Lachey & Maks Chmerkovskiy – Cha – “Woman” by Kesha featuring The Dap-Kings Horns
Victoria Arlen & Val Chmerkovskiy – Cha – “Born Ready” by Disco Fries featuring Hope Murphy
Dancing With the Stars is known for its larger than life opening sequences for each episode. Tonight’s premiere will incorporate the full cast, along with the judges, and it will be choreographed by Mandy Moore.
One very new aspect of the series this season is the fantasy league. ABC has launched the first-ever official Dancing with the Stars Fantasy League on abc.com/dfl. The game allows its players to guess which couple will win season 25 of the show and take home the coveted Mirrorball Trophy. Players earn points for correct predictions about the contestants, which can win them exclusive prizes.
Read More From Heavy
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© Source: http://heavy.com/entertainment/2017/09/dancing-with-the-stars-2017-premiere-spoilers-couples-performances-dwts-season-25-list-opening/
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3 dead after buses collide in Queens, New York Video

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The crash between a New York City MTA bus and a Dahlia charter bus happened in Flushing at just after 6:15 a.m. during the morning commute, officials said.
The crash between a New York City MTA bus and a Dahlia charter bus happened in Flushing at just after 6:15 a.m. during the morning commute, officials said.

© Source: http://abcnews.go.com/US/video/dead-buses-collide-queens-york-49928452
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U. S. flies advanced warplanes over Korean Peninsula

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B-1B bombers and F-35 stealth fighter jets used again in show of force as tension with North Korea mounts
SEOUL, South Korea — The U. S. military flew advanced bombers and stealth jets over the Korean Peninsula and near Japan in drills with South Korean and Japanese warplanes on Monday, three days after North Korea fired a missile over Japan .
The United States often sends powerful military aircraft in a show of force in times of heightened animosities with North Korea. The North launched its latest missile as it protested against tough new U. N. sanctions over its sixth nuclear test on Sept. 3 .
Monday’s flyovers involved two B-1Bs and four F-35Bs from the U. S. military and four F-15K fighter jets from South Korea, according to the South Korean and U. S. militaries. The U. S. and South Korean planes flew across the Korean Peninsula and practiced attacks by releasing live weapons at a firing range in South Korea, the U. S. Pacific Command said in a statement.
The U. S. warplanes also conducted formation training with Japanese fighter jets over waters near the southern island of Kyushu, according to the Pacific Command.
Since Kim Jong Un took power in North Korea in late 2011, his nation has tested weapons at a torrid pace. The country flight-tested two intercontinental ballistic missiles in July. Its nuclear test in September was its most powerful to date.
Many experts say it’s only a matter of time until Kim achieves his stated objective of possessing reliable nuclear-tipped missiles capable of striking anywhere in the mainland U. S.
State media on Saturday quoted Kim as saying that North Korea’s final goal “is to establish the equilibrium of real force with the U. S. and make the U. S. rulers dare not talk about military option” for the North.
Alarmed by North Korea’s advancing weapons programs, many conservatives in South Korea have called for the reintroduction of U. S. tactical nuclear weapons in the South. But the liberal-leaning government of President Moon Jae-in said it has no intention of requesting that the U. S. bring back such weapons.
South Korean Defense Minister Song Young-moo told lawmakers on Monday that it is “not proper” to reintroduce U. S. nuclear weapons. He previously said the idea should be “deeply considered” by the allies, inflaming already-heated debate on the issue.
China, which the U. S. has pressed to use its influence as North Korea’s most valuable trading partner to rein-in the rogue Kim regime, took a jab at the latest U. S. show of force on Monday as an unhelpful development.
“When various parties send threats through words or actions, including military threats, these have not promoted a resolution to the issue, rather they have aggravated the tensions and are not beneficial to a final resolution to the peninsula nuclear issue,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang told reporters on Monday.
With the crisis escalating in recent weeks, China and Russia have continued to call for direct dialogue between the U. S. and North Korea as the only means of easing the tension. The Trump administration has been clear that it will not engage in direct negotiations until and unless the Kim regime halts missile and nuclear tests.
U. S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley raised the prospect of U. S. military action against North Korea over the weekend, saying if the North continues what she called “reckless” behavior, the country woudl be “destroyed.”
Haley told CNN’s “State of the Union” that the U. N. Security Council had all but exhausted its diplomatic options for dealing with the North. And if diplomacy fails, she said Defense Secretary Jim Mattis “will take care of it.”

© Source: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/us-north-korea-b-1b-bombers-f-35-stealth-fighter-jets-korean-show-of-force/
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US allies fly fighter jets over Korean peninsula in show of force

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The United States with its allies Japan and South Korea flew fighter jets and bombers over the Korean peninsula in a show of force against President Kim Jong…
The United States with its allies Japan and South Korea flew fighter jets and bombers over the Korean peninsula in a show of force against President Kim Jong Un’s regime after it fired an intercontinental ballistic missile over Japan last week, the US military said on Monday.
The Air Force and Marine Corps warplanes also released live weapons during the Sunday exercise at a training area, the US Pacific Command said.
“U. S. Pacific Command maintains the ability to respond to any threat in the Indo-Asia-Pacific theater at a moment’s notice,” the US military said in the statement.
The military operation was in response to North Korea firing a missile last Friday that sailed over Japan and crashed 2,300 miles away in the Pacific Ocean — the second time in a month that Pyongyang has fired an ICBM over the island nation.
Kim’s government also successfully detonated a nuclear device earlier this month.
Meanwhile, Russia and China naval forces conducted drills near Russia’s border with North Korea, Reuters reported on Monday.
Citing China’s Xinhua news agency, it said the drills are the second part of joint Moscow-Beijing naval exercises this year that began in the Baltic in July. Xinhua did not link the exercises to escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula.
President Trump on Sunday mocked Kim as the “Rocket Man” in a tweet as the US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley warned North Korea it would be wiped out if the US is attacked.
“We wanted to be responsible and go through all diplomatic means to get their attention first. If that doesn’t work, General Mattis will take care of it,” Haley said on CNN’s “State of the Union,” referring to the Defense Secretary.
“If North Korea keeps on with this reckless behavior, the United States has to defend itself or defend its allies in anyway, North Korea will be destroyed, and we know that and none of us want that. None of us want war,” she added.
National Security Adviser HR McMaster said the US must react with “urgency” to North Korea’s continued threats.
“This regime is so close now to threatening the United States and others with a nuclear weapon that we really have to move with a great deal of urgency on sanctions, on diplomacy and on preparing, if necessary, a military option,” he said on “Fox News Sunday.”
In his tweet, Trump also suggested that UN sanctions against Kim’s regime were working, saying “long gas lines were forming in North Korea. Too bad!”
Pyongyang on Monday called the new restrictions on oil and textile imports “vicious, unethical and inhumane.”
“The increased moves of the US and its vassal forces to impose sanctions and pressure… will only increase our pace toward the ultimate completion of the state nuclear force,” North Korea’s foreign ministry spokesman said in a statement published in state-run media.

© Source: http://nypost.com/2017/09/18/us-allies-fly-fighter-jets-over-korean-peninsula-in-show-of-force/
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Protests resume after 80 arrests in St. Louis unrest

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A racially mixed crowd of demonstrators locked arms and marched quietly through downtown St. Louis Monday morning to protest the acquittal of a white former police officer in the killing of a…
ST. LOUIS (AP) – A racially mixed crowd of demonstrators locked arms and marched quietly through downtown St. Louis Monday morning to protest the acquittal of a white former police officer in the killing of a black suspect, following another night of unrest and more than 80 arrests.
The latest action follows three days of peaceful protests and three nights of violence in the city that has been rocked since Friday, when a judge announced he found Jason Stockley not guilty in the 2011 death of Anthony Lamar Smith.
Hundreds of riot police mobilized downtown late Sunday, arresting more than 80 people and seizing weapons amid reports of property damage and vandalism. The arrests came after demonstrators ignored orders to disperse, police said.
“I’m proud to tell you the city of St. Louis is safe and the police owned tonight,” Interim Police Chief Lawrence O’Toole said at a news conference early Monday.
Earlier Sunday, more than 1,000 people had gathered at police headquarters then marched without trouble through downtown St. Louis, the posh Central West End, and the trendy Delmar Loop area of nearby University City. Protesters also marched through two shopping malls in a wealthy area of St. Louis County.
By nightfall, most had gone home. The 100 or so people who remained grew increasingly agitated as they marched back toward downtown. Along the way, they knocked over planters, broke windows at a few shops and hotels, and scattered plastic chairs at an outdoor venue.
According to police, the demonstrators then sprayed bottles with an unknown substance on officers.
One officer suffered a leg injury and was taken to a hospital. His condition wasn’t known.
Soon afterward, buses brought in additional officers in riot gear, and police scoured downtown deep into the night, making arrests and seizing at least five weapons, according to O’Toole. Later, officers in riot gear gathered alongside a city boulevard chanting “whose street, our street” – a common refrain used by the protesters – after clearing the street of demonstrators and onlookers.
“We’re in control. This is our city and we’re going to protect it,” O’Toole said.
Mayor Lyda Krewson said at the same Monday news conference that “the days have been calm and the nights have been destructive” and that “destruction cannot be tolerated.”
Early Monday, more than 150 protesters marched arm-in-arm, some carrying signs, to city hall. Police turned traffic away as the marchers blocked a busy St. Louis street during the rush hour crush. Once at city hall, they found their voices, chanting: “I know that we will win.” The protesters then marched four blocks to a city court building, where they chanted again, then dispersed. The next protest is scheduled for Monday evening in University City.
The recent St. Louis protests follow a pattern seen since the August 2014 killing of Michael Brown in nearby Ferguson: The majority of demonstrators, though angry, are law-abiding. But as the night wears on, a subsection emerges, a different crowd more willing to confront police, sometimes to the point of clashes.
Protest organizer Anthony Bell said he understands why some act out: While change can come through peaceful protests, such as those led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., years of oppression has caused some to turn violent.
“I do not say the (violent) demonstrators are wrong, but I believe peaceful demonstrations are the best,” Bell said.
Many protesters believe police provoked demonstrators by showing up in riot gear and armored vehicles; police said they had no choice but to protect themselves once protesters started throwing things at them.
Stockley shot Smith after high-speed chase as officers tried to arrest Smith and his partner in a suspected drug deal.
Stockley, 36, testified he felt endangered because he saw Smith holding a silver revolver when Smith backed his car toward the officers and sped away.
Prosecutors said Stockley planted a gun in Smith’s car after the shooting. The officer’s DNA was on the weapon but Smith’s wasn’t. Dashcam video from Stockley’s cruiser recorded him saying he was “going to kill this (expletive).” Less than a minute later, he shot Smith five times.
Stockley’s lawyer dismissed the comment as “human emotions” during a dangerous pursuit. St. Louis Circuit Judge Timothy Wilson, who said prosecutors didn’t prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Stockley murdered Smith, said the statement could be ambiguous.
Stockley left the police department and moved to Houston three years ago.
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© Source: http://www.cbs46.com/story/36387978/protests-resume-after-80-arrests-in-st-louis-unrest
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