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Trade War Underway: White House Slaps China With Huge Tariffs:WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump brought the world...
06/15/2018

Trade War Underway: White House Slaps China With Huge Tariffs:
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump brought the world's two biggest economies to the brink of a trade war Friday by announcing a 25 percent tariff on up to $50 billion in Chinese imports to take effect July 6.

Beijing quickly responded that it would retaliate with penalties of the same scale on American goods — and it spelled out details to impose tariffs on 545 U.S. exports, including farm products, autos and seafood, according to the Xinhua state news agency.

In announcing the U.S. tariffs, Trump said he was fulfilling a campaign pledge to crack down on what he contends are China's unfair trade practices and its efforts to undermine U.S. technology and intellectual property.

"We have the great brain power in Silicon Valley, and China and others steal those secrets," Trump said on "Fox & Friends." ''We're going to protect those secrets. Those are crown jewels for this country."

The prospect of a U.S.-China trade war weighed on financial markets Friday. The Dow Jones industrial average was down more than 220 points in mid-afternoon trading before recovering somewhat to finish down 84 points. Other stock averages also declined.

The U.S. tariffs will cover 1,102 Chinese product lines worth about $50 billion a year. Included are 818 items, worth $34 billion a year, from a list of 1,333 the administration had released in April. After receiving public comment, the U.S. removed 515 product lines from the list, including TVs and some pharmaceuticals, according to a senior administration official who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity.

The administration is targeting an additional 284 Chinese products, which it says benefit from Beijing's strong-armed industrial policies, worth $16 billion a year. But it won't impose those tariffs until it gathers public comments. U.S. companies that rely on the targeted imports — and can't find substitutes — can apply for exemptions from the tariffs.

The Trump administration has sought to protect consumers from a direct impact from the tariffs, which amount to a tax on imports. The tariffs target mainly Chinese industrial machinery, aerospace parts and communications technology, while sparing such consumer goods as smartphones, TVs, toys and clothes that Americans purchase by the truckload from China.

These tariffs will impose higher costs on U.S. companies that use the equipment. And over time, those costs could be passed on to consumers. But the impact won't be as visible as it would be if consumer products were taxed directly.

By contrast, the Trump administration earlier this year imposed steep tariffs on imported washing machines. By May, the cost of laundry equipment had jumped 17 percent from two months earlier, according to government data.

The administration characterized the tariffs it announced Friday as entirely proper.

"It's thorough, it's moderate, it's appropriate," U.S. Trade Rep. Robert Lighthizer said on Fox Business Network's "Mornings With Maria."

Lighthizer added, "Our hope is that it doesn't lead to a rash reaction from China."

But Beijing's Commerce Ministry retorted: "The Chinese side doesn't want to fight a trade war, but facing the shortsightedness of the U.S. side, China has to fight back strongly. We will immediately introduce the same scale and equal taxation measures, and all economic and trade achievements reached by the two sides will be invalidated."

A ministry statement gave no details of what U.S. goods would be hit by Beijing's retaliatory tariffs. But China in April had announced possible targets, including light aircraft, orange juice, whiskey, beef and soybeans — an economically and politically important export from America's heartland.

"The farmer can maybe look to their soybean associations for help to find other markets, but that doesn't happen immediately," said Dan Basse of AgResource, an agricultural research and advisory firm. "There's not much the farmer can do right now."

The longer-term concern, Basse said, is that China will increasingly look to Argentina and Brazil and that the United States will lose market share.

Trump has already imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Canada, Mexico and European allies, sparking anger and retaliatory threats from some of America's closest longtime allies. But his proposed tariffs against China risk igniting a damaging trade war involving the world's two biggest economies.

Trump's decision follows his summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. The president has coordinated closely with China on efforts to pressure Pyongyang to eliminate its nuclear arsenal. But he signaled that whatever the implications for that or other issues, "I have to do what I have to do" to address China's trade policies.

By June 30, the administration is expected to finish writing rules to restrict China's ability to invest in U.S. technology.

Most of all, the U.S. tariffs are a response to China's attempts to supplant U.S. technological dominance, including outright theft of trade secrets and its requirement that U.S. companies share technology in exchange for access to the Chinese market.

The Trump administration has also argued that Beijing subsidies favored industries, encouraging them overinvest and overproduce. The result: China has flooded world markets in steel, aluminum, solar panels and products, thereby undercutting prices and putting foreign rivals out of business.

Wall Street has viewed the trade tensions with concern, fearful that they could strangle economic growth and undermine the benefits of the tax cuts Trump signed into law last year.

"Imposing tariffs places the cost of China's unfair trade practices squarely on the shoulders of American consumers, manufacturers, farmers, and ranchers," said Thomas Donohue, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Political reactions to Friday's announced tariffs cut across party lines. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Trump was "right on target."

"China is our real trade enemy, and their theft of intellectual property and their refusal to let our companies compete fairly threatens millions of future American jobs," Schumer added.

But Rep. Dave Reichert, R-Wash., said he disagreed with the action because "Americans will bear the brunt instead of China."

-AP Writers Christopher Rugaber, Kevin Freking and Martin Crutsinger in Washington and Alexandra Olson in New York contributed to this report.

Baltimore County Officer Amy Caprio buried two days before her 30th Birthday:https://leakylipsfeed.wixsite.com/leakylips...
05/28/2018

Baltimore County Officer Amy Caprio buried two days before her 30th Birthday:
https://leakylipsfeed.wixsite.com/leakylipsfeed/news-blog/baltimore-county-officer-amy-caprio-buried-two-days-before-her-30th-birthday
The bagpipes began, the crowd hushed and hundreds of police officers rose Friday morning in a rustle of dress blues. Black bands shrouded their badges as they watched the casket pass by holding the body of Baltimore County Police Officer Amy Caprio.
They watched the police pallbearers push her flag-draped casket into Mountain Christian Church in Joppa. More than 1,000 people came for the funeral of the first Baltimore County policewoman killed in the line of duty.
On Sunday she would have been 30 years old.

RUSSIA 2018 WORLD CUP 32 COUNTRIES: Egypt, Nigeria, Germany, Poland, Belgium, Spain, Serbia, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Mexi...
05/28/2018

RUSSIA 2018 WORLD CUP 32 COUNTRIES: Egypt, Nigeria, Germany, Poland, Belgium, Spain, Serbia, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Mexico, more..(TERRY BURRUS JAZZ FESTIVAL 2018) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qio8vtqDQ1o

PRESIDENT TRUMP'S PARDON OF BOXING LEGEND JACK JOHNSON IS AS WELCOME AS IT WAS UNEXPECTED::leakylipsfeed.wixsite.com/lea...
05/24/2018

PRESIDENT TRUMP'S PARDON OF BOXING LEGEND JACK JOHNSON IS AS WELCOME AS IT WAS UNEXPECTED::
leakylipsfeed.wixsite.com/leakylipsfeed
There is a particular irony in the fact that it took President Donald Trump, hardly a champion of rights for African-Americans and other racial minorities, to be the one who pardoned former heavyweight champion Jack Johnson.

An African-American who is among the greatest heavyweight boxers of all time, Johnson was convicted by an all-white jury in 1913 of violating the Mann Act, which was enacted in 1910 and made it a felony to transport a woman across state lines for “immoral purposes.”

His conviction was a glaring miscarriage of justice and many, notably Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and filmmaker Ken Burns, have championed Johnson’s cause and pushed for a pardon. Congress passed a resolution in 2015 calling for Johnson’s pardon, but President Obama didn’t sign it.

Eric Holder, who was President Obama’s attorney general from 2009 through 2015, told WPIX in New York in 2016 that allegations of domestic violence against Johnson made him difficult to pardon.

“Jack Johnson no question was convicted unfairly,” Holder told WPIX. “That might be a historical injustice that might need to be rethought.”

But Holder then brought up the domestic violence issue, noting, “There are on the other side countervailing concerns about the way [Johnson] treated women, physically treated women. So all of this has to be balanced before this president or his successor would make a determination that a pardon is appropriate.”

Johnson’s conviction, though, clearly was a sham and was a wrong that needed to be corrected. Burns released a statement lauding the decision:

“It is the right thing to do. I’m just so happy that Senator John McCain, who has led our efforts to achieve a posthumous pardon for Jack Johnson, has lived to witness this moment. The pardon announced today helps correct an injustice experienced by Jack Johnson. But it also reminds us of a racist past and how even today racist remarks and coded words are used to imperil African Americans, especially black men, and to advance an un-American agenda.”
Johnson was Muhammad Ali more than 30 years before the boxer who would go on to become known as “The Greatest” was born. Like Ali, Johnson was a heavyweight champion who had uncommon speed, quickness and movement for a man who was 6-foot-1 and weighed around 210 pounds.

At the turn of the 20th century, that was large for a heavyweight of that era. But Johnson had the agility, footwork and hand speed of men 40 and 50 pounds lighter, and so he was a dominant fighter in his peak.

Deontay Wilder, the reigning WBC heavyweight champion, attended the White House pardoning ceremony on Thursday and said, “It meant a lot to me to be there to be a part of it.”

Wilder called Johnson “the original TBE,” in a nod to Floyd Mayweather, who dubbed himself “TBE” as in “The Best Ever.” Wilder said he spoke to Hall of Famer Lennox Lewis, another ex-heavyweight champion who attended the ceremony, about Johnson’s talent.

“I don’t know a whole lot about the kind of boxer he was because that was a long time ago, but I have seen highlights of him and you can see he was a force in [the ring],” Wilder told Yahoo Sports in a brief phone conversation. “Lennox told me he was one of the best. Ali got a lot of his stuff from [Johnson]. He was the original. He was the original TBE.

“He was the guy who came up with it all. He had his style and his swagger and he was the first to do that. Now, everybody talks and everybody wants to do their thing in there, but he was the guy who started it all. It was amazing for me to see this, to see a guy after all these years and all these presidents that could have done it but not to do it, for this to happen for him now. It was good to see.”

The pardon was many years late, and unfortunate that it didn’t happen during Johnson’s lifetime. Johnson, who fought exhibition matches until he was 67, died in 1946 in Franklinton, North Carolina. He left a diner that refused to serve him because of his race and died in an auto accident as he was leaving town.

Ali was only 4 when Johnson died, but referred to Johnson as “The Greatest,” in several interviews.

Trump’s decision is as welcome as it was unexpected. While posthumous presidential pardons are rare – Johnson’s is only the third ever – it was a stain on this country that needed to be removed.

It was largely symbolic, and there are scores of unfairly convicted minorities sitting in jails who could desperately use a pardon who will never get it.

Boxer Jack Johnson (56-11-8, 35 KOs) was the first black world heavyweight champion. (AP)

That should never be forgotten, even as Trump’s signature on the pardon papers should be celebrated.

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are married: Here is everything you need to know
05/19/2018

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are married: Here is everything you need to know

On Saturday, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle became the Duke and Duchess of Sussex after they exchanged vows at St. George's Chapel at Windsor Castle.

61 PERCENT OF REPUBLICANS THINK THE FBI IS FRAMING TRUMP POLLS FIND:leakylipsfeed.wixsite.com/leakylipsfeedhttps://twitt...
05/11/2018

61 PERCENT OF REPUBLICANS THINK THE FBI IS FRAMING TRUMP POLLS FIND:
leakylipsfeed.wixsite.com/leakylipsfeed
https://twitter.com/leakylipsfeed
Sixty-one percent of Republicans responded with "Yes, he is being framed." Just 17 percent said he was not being framed while 21 percent were not sure. Overall, 29 percent of Americans thought that the FBI and Justice Department were working to frame the president. A plurality of 45 percent thought Trump was not being framed while 26 percent were not sure. Perhaps predictably, not many Democrats—just 7 percent—thought the FBI was framing Trump while 78 percent responded no, according to YouGov. Twenty-five percent of independents thought Trump was being framed while 39 percent thought he was not.
Trending: Kevin Kamenetz Cause of Death: Maryland Gubernatorial Candidate Dies Suddenly Months Before Election
The YouGov poll surveyed 1,500 U.S. adults from May 6 through May 8. It had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
Supporters of President Donald Trump sing the national anthem as they rally for the president during his visit on March 13 in San Diego, California. David McNew/Getty Images
Trump has made it a regular practice to criticize officials he doesn't like and has regularly claimed the investigation is a "witch hunt."
Don't miss: President Blocks Gender Change Law in Portugal
"The Russia Witch Hunt is rapidly losing credibility," the former reality-TV star tweeted this week, for instance. "House Intelligence Committee found No Collusion, Coordination or anything else with Russia. So now the Probe says OK, what else is there? How about Obstruction for a made up, phony crime.There is no O, it’s called Fighting Back."
That messaging appears to be working with Trump's base as well. A YouGov pollin April found that 75 percent of Republicans—and about a third of all Americans—agreed with the president that the investigation into Trump is a "witch hunt.
A new poll from YouGov released Wednesday found a majority of Republicans think the FBI is working to frame President Donald Trump amid the ongoing investigation into his connections with Russia.
YouGov asked U.S. adults: "Do you believe Donald Trump is being framed by the FBI and the Department of Justice?"

LIES OR WHAT OF RUDY GIULIANI, TRUMP ON STORMY DANIELS?Rudy Giuliani, the former New York City mayor who recently joined...
05/06/2018

LIES OR WHAT OF RUDY GIULIANI, TRUMP ON STORMY DANIELS?
Rudy Giuliani, the former New York City mayor who recently joined President Donald Trump’s legal team, sat down with ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos on Sunday for a wide-ranging, eyebrow-raising interview.
Giuliani appeared on ABC’s “This Week” following his explosive revelation on Fox News last week that Trump had reimbursed Michael Cohen, the president’s personal attorney, for the $130,000 payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels.
Trump, who had previously denied all knowledge of the payment, suggested Friday that Giuliani didn’t have “his facts straight.” Giuliani quickly backpedaled, saying during a Fox News appearance on Saturday that he was “still learning” about the case. On Sunday, he continued to sow confusion about what he knows.
Here were some of the biggest takeaways from his ABC interview:
Giuliani suggested he isn’t concerned about whether Trump lied to the press regarding his knowledge of the Daniels payment because that’s “political” and not a “crime.”
Giuliani said last week that Trump first found out about the payment to Daniels (whose real name is Stephanie Clifford) several weeks ago, but claimed Sunday that he was less certain of the timeline.
“I don’t know when the president learned about it,” he said. “The reality is those are not facts that worry me as a lawyer. Those don’t amount to anything ― what is said to the press. That’s political.”
“It’s okay to lie to the press?” Stephanopoulos interrupted.
“Gee, I don’t know,” Giuliani responded. “You know a few presidents who did that. I don’t think that this president has done that. But in any event, that’s not the crime.”
Rudy Giuliani on : "What is said to the press, that's political."

Giuliani walked back his comments about Cohen complaining that Trump never reimbursed him for the Daniels payment.
Giuliani told multiple news outlets last week that Cohen had complained after the 2016 election about Trump not reimbursing him for the Daniels payment. But Giuliani appeared to downplay those statements Sunday, calling Cohen’s alleged complaints just “one of the rumors.”
“But that’s what you said,” Stephanopoulos said. “You stated it as fact.”
“Well maybe I did,” Giuliani responded. “I don’t know. How do you separate fact and opinion?”
Giuliani didn’t rule out that Trump may take the Fifth Amendment if subpoenaed to testify in special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation.
“Every lawyer in America thinks he would be a fool to testify,” Giuliani said. “I’ve got a client who wants to testify. ... I hope we get a chance to tell him the risk that he’s taking.”
Giuliani also said he expects Cohen to “cooperate” with prosecutors in the probe of Russian meddling in the presidential election, and claimed pardoning him if he’s indicted or convicted of a crime is “obviously not on the table.”
“It has not been discussed, and would not be discussed” Giuliani said. “I’m a big believer in the pardon power. ... But right now, pardons would be a bit ― they wouldn’t be illegal to talk about, they’d be kind of confusing.”
Either way, Giuliani said it’s time for Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to shut down Mueller’s investigation.
“There’s no question that the amount of government misconduct is accumulating,” he said. “I happen to believe it’s greater than anybody realizes.”

'YOU TRIED TO KILL ME', OFFICER CONFRONTS MAN WHO SHOT HIM:https://twitter.com/leakylipsfeedleakylipsfeed.wixsite.com/le...
05/02/2018

'YOU TRIED TO KILL ME', OFFICER CONFRONTS MAN WHO SHOT HIM:
https://twitter.com/leakylipsfeed
leakylipsfeed.wixsite.com/leakylipsfeed
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WILLOUGHBY HILLS, Ohio -- An Ohio police officer appeared in court to confront the man who shot him and his partner, and he didn't hold back how he felt about the defendant.

Officer Craig Anderson was face-to-face with Timothy Schmidt for the first time.

Schmidt was in the process of being sentenced for shooting Officer Anderson and his partner during a traffic stop in September.

He pleaded guilty to two counts of felonious assault and one count of resisting arrest.

"Do you have any idea what you did to me? To my partner? To my family? To his family?" Officer Anderson said, speaking directly to Schmidt.

Officer Anderson told Schmidt he wasn't allowed to bring his weapon into court because officials thought it might be a risk. But he said he's different than the man who tried to kill him in that he can control himself.

Things got intense when Officer Anderson yelled "You tried to kill me" at Schmidt, but he was quickly able to regain composure.

Officer Anderson spent four months in the hospital following the shooting. His partner was hospitalized for five months.

Schmidt read a statement apologizing for what he did. He said he was on drugs at the time of the shooting.

He's been sentenced to 44-and-a-half years in prison.

COUPLE WHO SURVIVED LAS VEGAS MASSACRE GET ENGAGED:https://twitter.com/leakylipsfeedleakylipsfeed.wixsite.com/leakylipsf...
04/26/2018

COUPLE WHO SURVIVED LAS VEGAS MASSACRE GET ENGAGED:
https://twitter.com/leakylipsfeed
leakylipsfeed.wixsite.com/leakylipsfeed
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As it was for many Americans, October 1, 2017, was a sobering date for Mykenzie Lane and her boyfriend, Brandon Helmick. The couple of three years were listening to Jason Aldean at the Route 91 Harvest music festival in Las Vegas when a gunman, later identified as Stephen Paddock, opened fire, killing 58 people and injuring hundreds of others.

On Friday, however, the two were able to celebrate a more joyous occasion: their engagement.

Helmick, 21, proposed to Lane, 22, last week. The Mission Viejo man asked Lane to marry him using a “heart full of rose petals” on Laguna Beach, she told Fox News on Wednesday.

“I had some idea but I still cried my eyes out,” Lane, a California State student, said.

While an engagement is a special milestone for any couple, it holds a deeper significance for the California natives: Helmick protected Lane during the shooting.

Helmick, a baseball player at Saddleback College, threw his body over Lane after the first round of rapid-fire shots went off. The two then ran toward nearby storage units for shelter.

But moments later, Lane was shot. One of the gunman’s bullets hit the side of her left ankle, traveling through the front of her shin and then exiting out through her cowboy boot.

“From that point, he said we have to find a way to the hospital. I tried to walk but couldn’t, so he threw me on his back and carried me until we found an ambulance,” she said.

When the couple arrived at the ambulance, however, it had “people in it that needed much more help than me, so we proceeded to find an Uber which thankfully gave us a ride,” she said.

Lane said she and Helmick have “endless amounts of blessings to be thankful for every day because we’re still here.” Still, the incident has “impacted our lives in more ways than one,” she added.

“We don’t like to be apart for long periods of time, we stick together especially at night,” Lane, from Tustin, Calif., said.

But the country music-loving couple is moving forward. They’ve even set a date for their wedding: August 3.

“Our relationship has always meant the world to me,” said Lane. “But when someone sacrifices their life for you, how could you ever get more reassurance than that?”

"DALLAS POLICE OFFICER DEAD IN SHOOTING"DALLAS (AP) — The gunman accused of opening fire at a Dallas home improvement st...
04/25/2018

"DALLAS POLICE OFFICER DEAD IN SHOOTING"

DALLAS (AP) — The gunman accused of opening fire at a Dallas home improvement store — killing one police officer and critically injuring two others — was initially detained because he was acting suspiciously and may have tried to steal from the store, an arrest warrant revealed Wednesday.

An off-duty officer who was working a part-time job at the Home Depot store in the north of the city learned Armando Luis Juarez, 29, had an outstanding felony warrant after he was detained by store officials for suspected shoplifting, according to the arrest warrant.

Two on-duty officers, Rogelio Santander and Crystal Almeida, were called to the store and, along with a Home Depot loss-prevention officer, were speaking with Juarez in an office. The off-duty officer stepped away, heard a report of "shots fired" broadcast over the police radio and then rushed back to the office to find the officers and loss-prevention employee on the ground with gunshot wounds, according to the warrant.

Investigators later reviewed police body-camera footage that showed Juarez pulling a handgun from his pocket as Santander and Almeida attempted to take him into custody, the warrant alleges.

Santander died Wednesday of his injuries and Almeida and the loss-prevention officer, Scott Painter, were in critical condition.

Juarez was arrested late Tuesday on charges of aggravated assault on a public servant and felony theft. He was subsequently charged with capital murder. Juarez was being held on a bond in excess of $1 million at the Dallas County jail.

Police Chief U. Renee Hall said at a brief news conference Wednesday that Almeida and Painter are "making remarkable recoveries" following surgery.

"This is going to be a trying time for us, so we're just asking you for your support at this time," Hall said.

Police were called to the Home Depot in Lake Highlands at around 4 p.m. Tuesday to remove Juarez from the store. Hours after he escaped, his white pickup truck was spotted by police and a high-speed chase ensued, eventually resulting in his capture just before 10 p.m.

Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings said late Tuesday that he was "upset at the lack of respect for our police in this city and in our country."

The next day, speaking at a city council meeting, Rawlings said, "I hope that we have a degree of respect and honor for our police and first responders today in everything that we do."

In 2016, four Dallas police officers and a transit officer were shot dead by a sniper in an ambush that came toward the end of a peaceful protest over the police killings of black men in other cities.

Relatives of Juarez said they couldn't believe he would be involved in such a violent episode.

"There's no way my son could've done this," Ruben Juarez told The Dallas Morning News, adding that he didn't think his son owned any guns.

Armando Juarez's grandmother, Janie Longoria, told reporters Tuesday that her grandson is a "sweet, lovable person," but that his friends are a bad influence.

Juarez was arrested in January on a charge of unlawful use of a motor vehicle after authorities say he was found in a stolen vehicle. He also pleaded guilty to a drug-possession charge.

"And I told him to stay away from those people," Juarez's grandmother said.

A Home Depot spokesman told The Associated Press on Wednesday that the shooting sent a wave of horror through the home improvement store chain's corporate headquarters in Atlanta.

"We're heartbroken," said spokesman Stephen Holmes. He added that the chain's leadership team has been actively supporting Painter's family and offering counseling to his co-workers.

Otherwise, Holmes said the company is referring to police all questions about the shooting and the run-up to it.

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