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女子がスマホを語る [無断転載禁止]©2ch.net
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0001(∞◎◎)◇ミリタリーガール垢版2017/08/18(金) 00:16:20.13ID:7mJ6sy14
私は傭兵(狙撃手スナイパー)をしている、
16才ぬぉ乙女。
0002SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/18(金) 01:43:21.44ID:SnbJ1lV8
ま ~ ん w
0003SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/18(金) 02:48:28.73ID:R1vKDmKp
女子は頭が悪いからiPhoneがオススメ
0005SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/18(金) 12:47:42.18ID:rkWNNL/X
わたしのぉまんこはs8のバイブレーションがあいいわあ
ぬぷぬぷ
0007SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/18(金) 15:21:33.26ID:sc92dafk
2chに専板に巣食う女子とか気持ち悪いだけや
0008(∞◎◎)◇ミリタリーガール垢版2017/08/18(金) 15:26:32.10ID:b2d8cHvu
あら、私はオンナよ。
同じチームぬぉ隊長かるぁ口説かれてるの

隊長は180*120*40ぬぉスキンヘッドぬぉゴルィマッチョ。
強引ぬぃ組み敷かれたるぁなすがままだわん。
0009SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/18(金) 17:23:13.26ID:djVYtnoD
か、母さん・・・こんな所で・・・。
0011SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 13:34:40.71ID:fWxeit7R
ミスちゃん、ごきげんよう!
スマホ語りたくさん聞かせて下さい!
0012(∞◎◎)◇ミステリアスガール垢版2017/08/19(土) 13:49:28.42ID:8ImPjPx8
私ぬぉフアンね?
私ぬぃとってスマフォはファッションぬぉ一部。
オシャレかつ、スタイリッスぬぃ持ちたいの。
0013SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 14:34:10.41
As President Trump spent the week flailing in a web of his own contradictions and half-hearted retractions in his handling of the deaths in Charlottesville,
the question of his survival in office inevitably began creeping into the political dialogue.
Official betting odds that the president would be gone from the White House before the end of his first term spiked on Monday when he memorably blamed the deadly violence on “many sides,” and by Thursday had settled at near even money.
That same day, Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., ranking member of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution,
said he planned to introduce articles of impeachment, an idea that has also been floated by some high-profile Democratic legislators including Sen.
Elizabeth Warren.
0014SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 14:34:50.93
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With Stephen Bannon, the worry always was that he could be even more disruptive to President Donald Trump’s White House from outside than he was within.

In the hours following his firing on Friday, those fears seemed warranted, as the conservative voices who viewed Bannon as one of their own howled in rage over Trump's decision to fire his chief strategist.

The reaction was most notable from Breitbart News, the hard-right news site that Bannon ran before he joined Trump’s presidential campaign last year.

“WAR,” tweeted one of the site's editors, Joel Pollak, who published a piece questioning whether Trump would now move in a more moderate direction with Bannon out of the White House.
0015SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 14:35:40.28
Ah, the start of the new school year. A time for reconnecting with friends, hoping not to get roasted over the new clothes your mom got for you, and, of course, getting subjected to your teacher’s chosen brand of sports-fandom-masquerading-as-broader-lessons-about-life-and-morality.

[Now’s the time to sign up for Fantasy Football! Join for free]

User lazycollegedude (way to own your branding, my guy) hit Reddit’s NBA community on Thursday to share what he says is a handout that his brother received at school about what does, and does not, constitute appropriate classroom behavior ― a document that, for one reason or another, sees fit to roast Kevin Durant:
0016SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 14:37:13.78
On Thursday’s episode of Judge Judy, a man was trying to prove that his friend stole his rare and valuable Yu-Gi-Oh! playing cards but, that wasn’t the most unusual thing about the case ― it was actually a very conspicuous celebrity cameo by Trainwreck star Amy Schumer.

We already love Schumer for so many reasons, but her appearance was even more amazing because she wasn’t there to promote anything. She’s just a legit Judge Judy fan, so she attended the show with her sister to have a fangirl experience.

Naturally, Twitter went crazy Thursday when viewers noticed the comedian in the audience.

Schumer responded by posting to her Instagram: “Hell yeah! You know I was in the audience on #judgejudy My sister and I sat in on the cases for the day because we love her!!!!!” -@AmySchumer

An hour later, she posted a video ― which she first shared back in May ― from her day on set, messing around with the show’s bailiff, Petri Hawkins-Byrd.

Celebrities ― they’re just like us.

Watch Amy Schumer leave Steve Harvey in stitches on Celebrity Family Feud:
0017SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 14:38:19.66
Any male growing up during the ’80s probably remembers Kelly LeBrock. The model made her acting debut alongside Gene Wilder in The Lady in Red, played a superhuman robot in the teen flick Weird Science, and starred opposite husband Steven Seagal in Hard to Kill.

LeBrock and Seagal were married for nine years before divorcing in 1996 and have three children together ― Annaliza, 30; Dominic, 27; and Arissa, 24. Following the divorce, LeBrock left her glamorous life in Hollywood.

She told Closer Weekly: “I decided to quit Hollywood to raise my babies away from the limelight. I didn’t want them looking into any of the negative aspects of my divorce [from Steven]. So I ran for the hills, and I’ve basically been living in the wilderness [of Southern California] with no TV for 24 years!”

Although she has been living off the grid, the former actress returns to the spotlight in Lifetime’s upcoming reality show Growing Up Supermodel, which chronicles daughter Arissa’s journey becoming a plus-size model.

In other entertainment news, Debbie Gibson’s ‘Out of the Blue’ turns 30: a look back at her signature ’80s style:
0018SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 14:39:47.88
The former governor of California and mega-movie star Arnold Schwarzenegger took to the internet to teach Donald Trump how to condemn hatred.
In a video on the website ATTN:, Schwarzenegger began, “There are not two sides to bigotry, and there are not two sides to hatred. And if you choose to march with a flag that symbolizes the slaughter of millions of people, there are not two sides to that.”

Schwarzenegger’s video was a response to Trump’s claim that there were “very fine people on both sides” of the Charlottesville incident, in which white supremacists, who carried Nazi and Confederate flags, clashed with counterprotesters.

He spoke directly to Trump, saying, “As president of this great country, you have a moral responsibility to send an unequivocal message that you won’t stand for hate and racism.”

Many have sharply renounced Trump’s comments on Charlottesville, so Schwarzenegger helped write a more fitting speech. He said, “As president of the United States and as a Republican,
I reject the support of white supremacists. The country that defeated Hitler’s armies is no place for Nazi flags. The party of Lincoln won’t stand with those who carry the battle flag of the failed Confederacy.”

He ended the video by saying that people must stand up to hatred and urged people to donate to their favorite anti-hate group.

Watch: Seth Meyers calls Trump’s Charlottesville press conference ‘clinically insane’
0019(∞◎◎)◇ミステリアスガール垢版2017/08/19(土) 15:05:43.49ID:8ImPjPx8
逃げるのね、キューテー。
ハイ逃亡〜
0020SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 15:11:36.78
BEIJING (AP) ― A military solution to the North Korean missile threat would be "horrific" but allowing Pyongyang to develop the capability to launch a nuclear attack on the United States is "unimaginable," the top U.S. military officer said Thursday in Beijing.

The chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford, told reporters that President Donald Trump directly has "told us to develop credible viable military options and that's exactly what we're doing."

Dunford was responding to questions about Trump's chief strategist Steve Bannon saying in a new interview that the threat posed by North Korea cannot handled by force.

"There's no military solution, forget it," Bannon told The American Prospect. "Until somebody solves the part of the equation that shows me that 10 million people in Seoul don't die in the first 30 minutes from conventional weapons, I don't know what you're talking about, there's no military solution here, they got us."

In Beijing, Dunford said it's "absolutely horrific if there would be a military solution to this problem, there's no question about it."

But, he added, "what's unimaginable is allowing KJU (North Korean leader Kim Jong Un) to develop ballistic missiles with a nuclear warhead that can threaten the United States and continue to threaten the region."

Dunford met later Thursday with Chinese President Xi Jinping, during which both men reinforced the importance of exchanges between their militaries in stabilizing a relationship frequently roiled by disputes over security, diplomacy and trade.

"We both know that you and President Trump are committed to our improvement in military-to-military relations and we have approached it with great commitment, candor and we certainly want to deliver results," Dunford told Xi in opening remarks.

Earlier, Dunford met with his Chinese counterpart Fang Fenghui, chief of the People's Liberation Army's joint staff department, another top general, Fan Changlong and top foreign policy adviser, Yang Jiechi.
0021SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 15:12:13.40
By all accounts, Vicky Veness appeared to be the picture of health. The personal trainer exercised on a daily basis, she didn’t smoke and she followed a well-balanced diet ― yet, this photo of her smiling into the camera was taken the very day she was diagnosed with lung cancer.

Now, the 30-year-old is shattering notions of what a serious illness should look like.

“Just a warning that this post may be upsetting to read,” Veness warned readers.

ALSO SEE: Mom shares heartbreaking photo of her breastfeeding post-mastectomy

“This photo was taken a few hours before I was diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer. I’m 30 years old, a personal trainer, runner, non-smoker and healthy eater. When you have cancer you won’t necessarily look ill on the outside.”
0022SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 15:14:11.35
After a monthlong hiatus from Instagram and her 1.6 million followers, McKayla Maroney is back with a burst of photos, some showing the former Olympic gymnast ― whose on-the-podium smirk brought her instant fame back in 2012 ― wearing jeans and a cute PJ top over a bikini.

The 21-year-old aspiring pop singer posted her comeback photo, a blurry long-haired image, on Wednesday, writing “happy 2 be back.” But it was another post in which Maroney took the opportunity to explain her social media cleanse.
0023SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 15:14:45.75
The Powerball jackpot for Saturday's drawing, after no one won on Wednesday, is up to $535 million as of 12:30 p.m. ET Friday.

That is a pretty huge chunk of money. However, as we saw before Wednesday's drawing, when the jackpot was $430 million, taking a closer look at the underlying math of the lottery shows that it's probably a bad idea to buy a ticket.

Consider the expected value

When trying to evaluate the outcome of a risky, probabilistic event like the lottery, one of the first things to look at is expected value.

The expected value of a randomly decided process is found by taking all the possible outcomes of the process, multiplying each outcome by its probability, and adding all those numbers up. This gives us a long-run average value for our random process.

Expected value is helpful for assessing gambling outcomes. If my expected value for playing the game, based on the cost of playing and the probabilities of winning different prizes, is positive, then, in the long run, the game will make me money. If expected value is negative, then this game is a net loser for me.

Lotteries are a great example of this kind of probabilistic process. In Powerball, for each $2 ticket you buy, you choose five numbers between 1 and 69 (represented by white balls in the drawing) and one number between 1 and 26 (the red "powerball"). Prizes are based on how many of the player's chosen numbers match the numbers drawn.

Match all five of the numbers on the white balls and the one on the red powerball, and you win the jackpot. After that, smaller prizes are given out for matching some subset of the numbers.
0024(∞◎◎)◇ミステリアスガール垢版2017/08/19(土) 15:37:16.25ID:8ImPjPx8
逃亡確定。
0025SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 16:37:08.48
Hiking Summer Outdoor Activities

Alberta's infinite variety of landscapes can satisfy any hiker's wanderlust. Thousands of kilometers of trails beckon for all abilities, from short easy rambles to classic hikes and multi-day treks.

Epic scenery awaits in our protected parks and wildlands. Try heli-hiking in our Canadian Rockies backcountry and discover secluded alpine lakes and mountain meadows where wildflowers and wildlife abounds. Explore the mysterious Canadian Badlands and witness the work of eons of erosion that sculpted this strangely compelling terrain.

Discover the silence of a northern boreal forest. Wander through grasslands stretching to the horizon. Our temperate climate is ideal for hiking, from spring through autumn.
0026SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 16:37:47.83
By Amy Sawitta Lefevre and Prak Chan Thul

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - No sooner had the 11-story apartment building in Phnom Penh's affluent Tuol Kouk district been finished than dozens of young Chinese men and women moved in loaded with desks and laptops, said neighbors.

"I thought they were moving an office in," said Eng Somnang, 20, who owns a noodle soup shop directly opposite and watched them arrive early this month.

Police in the Cambodian capital accuse them of doing exactly that: setting up a criminal call center with more than 200 Chinese nationals to carry out a telephone and internet scam on victims in China.

Police raided the building on Wednesday to stop what they said was the latest operation of a type that has duped people out of billions of dollars - with scammers operating from countries that have good internet access and relaxed visa rules.

From a balcony of the building in Phnom Penh, some of the suspects told Reuters they had not been given food and police were not allowing them to leave.

One of the suspects, Fang, 30, from China, said she came to Cambodia on a tourist visa. She said there were more than 200 people inside the building but declined to answer questions about what they had been doing there.

Police said they had arrested 225 Chinese nationals, 25 of them women, on suspicion of using internet voice calls for an extortion scheme. They will be sent to China to face justice, police investigators said.

Since 2011, Cambodia has deported 800 people from mainland China and Taiwan, arrested on suspicion of telecoms scams.

Neighbors in Tuol Kouk, dotted with large villas, described the occupants of the building as quiet. They said it had been rented out to tenants for $25,000 a month. The owner was not available to comment.
0027SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 16:38:56.78
Kevin Durant became the latest Warrior ― joining Stephen Curry, Andre Iguodala, and Shaun Livingston, that we know of ― to say he would not visit President Donald Trump’s White House as NBA champion.

Which is all kind of moot because it’s unlikely the White House invites them and outspoken Trump critic/Warriors coach Steve Kerr and his players any way.

(The White House’s biggest concern should be that Kerr accepts the invitation and uses that platform to challenge the president’s policies and style in front of him.)

Durant’s comments led to plenty of talk on sports talk radio and around the sports world online about whether a player or team should decline an invitation from the president. It’s not a new debate,

Tom Brady denied that politics is why he didn’t visit Barack Obama’s White House (although I’m not sure many believed him), but KD’s on a big stage now so it became a talking point.
0028SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 16:39:49.24
ABERDEEN, Wash. (AP) -- One-hundred-fifty baskets of pink petunias hang from the light posts all over this city, watered regularly by residents trying to make their community feel alive again. A local artist spends his afternoons high in a bucket truck, painting a block-long mural of a little girl blowing bubbles, each circle the scene of an imagined, hopeful future.

But in the present, vacant buildings dominate blocks. A van, stuffed so full of blankets and boxes they are spilling from the windows, pulls to the curb outside Stacie Blodgett's antiques shop.

"Look inside of it," she says. "I bet you he's living in it."

Around the corner, a crowded tent city of the desperate and addicted has taken over the riverbank, makeshift memorials to too many dead too young jutting up intermittently from the mud.

America, when viewed through the bars on Blodgett's windows, looks a lot less great than it used to be. So she answered Donald Trump's call to the country's forgotten corners. Thousands of her neighbors did, too, and her county, once among the most reliably Democratic in the nation, swung Republican in a presidential election for the first time in 90 years.

"People were like, 'This guy's going to be it. He's going to change everything, make it better again,'" she says.

Blodgett stands at the computer on her counter and scrolls through the headlines. Every day it's something new: details in the Russia campaign investigation, shake-ups at the White House, turmoil over Trump's response to race-fueled riots.

His administration's failed plans to remake the health care system may or may not cost millions their coverage, and there's a lack of clarity over how exactly he intends to eradicate a spiraling drug crisis that now claims 142 American lives each day ― a growing number of them here, in Grays Harbor County.
0029SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 16:40:23.97
By James Oliphant and Steve Holland

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With Stephen Bannon, the worry always was that he could be even more disruptive to President Donald Trump’s White House from outside than he was within.

In the hours following his firing on Friday, those fears seemed warranted, as the conservative voices who viewed Bannon as one of their own howled in rage over Trump's decision to fire his chief strategist.

The reaction was most notable from Breitbart News, the hard-right news site that Bannon ran before he joined Trump’s presidential campaign last year.

“WAR,” tweeted one of the site's editors, Joel Pollak, who published a piece questioning whether Trump would now move in a more moderate direction with Bannon out of the White House.

"Steve Bannon personified the Trump agenda," Pollak wrote.

Bannon rejoined Breitbart as executive chairman only hours after his firing was announced. He is now expected to use it as a platform to blast those within the White House - and perhaps Trump himself - when they don't hew to the fiercely nationalist policies Bannon advocated as an inside adviser.

As Trump's chief strategist, Bannon fought numerous battles with senior Trump aides and top Republicans in Congress over the administration's policy agenda.

Breitbart frequently backed him up, ripping establishment Republicans such as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Speaker of the House of Representatives Paul Ryan, blaming them for obstructing Trump's agenda.

More recently, the site trained its fire on Trump's national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, after he removed officials who espoused Bannon's foreign-policy world view.

In recent days, Bannon had told friends he is worth tens of millions of dollars, is a worldwide leader in the populist-nationalist movement that propelled Trump to power, and could go back to Breitbart, which he refers to as a “killing machine”, or perhaps other endeavors financed by the family of hedge-fund tycoon Robert Mercer, his longtime ally.

“Steve has a powerful voice, and he’s going to keep that voice up,” said Sam Nunberg, a former Trump campaign adviser and Bannon friend. “He’s going to continue to promote policies that got Donald Trump in the White House.”

Bannon had clashed with the likes of Gary Cohn, the director of the National Economic Council, and Jared Kushner, a Trump adviser and the president’s son-in-law, both of whom favored more business-friendly, mainstream economic policies on trade, taxes, and other matters.
0030SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 16:41:02.13
Any male growing up during the ’80s probably remembers Kelly LeBrock. The model made her acting debut alongside Gene Wilder in The Lady in Red, played a superhuman robot in the teen flick Weird Science, and starred opposite husband Steven Seagal in Hard to Kill.

LeBrock and Seagal were married for nine years before divorcing in 1996 and have three children together ― Annaliza, 30; Dominic, 27; and Arissa, 24. Following the divorce, LeBrock left her glamorous life in Hollywood.

She told Closer Weekly: “I decided to quit Hollywood to raise my babies away from the limelight. I didn’t want them looking into any of the negative aspects of my divorce [from Steven]. So I ran for the hills, and I’ve basically been living in the wilderness [of Southern California] with no TV for 24 years!”

Although she has been living off the grid, the former actress returns to the spotlight in Lifetime’s upcoming reality show Growing Up Supermodel, which chronicles daughter Arissa’s journey becoming a plus-size model.

In other entertainment news, Debbie Gibson’s ‘Out of the Blue’ turns 30: a look back at her signature ’80s style:
0031(∞◎◎)◇ミステリアスガール垢版2017/08/19(土) 17:11:57.28ID:8ImPjPx8
土曜だすぃ、今宵はダンスホールでも行こうカスィラね。
アンダーグラウンドぬぉ会員制セレブ御用達。
ピル飲んで行かないと妊娠しちゃうほど
過激ぬぁの。
0032SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 19:08:45.99ID:fWxeit7R
>>31
なんだか怖そうな所ですね!
0033SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/19(土) 20:15:12.74ID:5NtsEhnL
何まん?
0035SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/20(日) 02:19:37.49
みんなー
照子が死んだぉ
(●´ω`●)
0036SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/20(日) 09:18:48.28ID:AqedwDgA
中国のおにゃの子なの?
0037(∞◎◎)◇ミステリアスガール垢版2017/08/20(日) 10:48:26.98ID:NvEKx5GP
私の体ぬぃは、
アメリカ、ロシア、ブラヂル、日本ぬぉ血が混ざってるの。
0038SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/20(日) 12:06:31.46ID:5UNl3cAT
>>37
エキゾチックな雰囲気にクラクラしてしまいます!
0039SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/20(日) 14:24:11.23
Al Gore has long been a knight of the movement to combat climate change. But when he returned to the national spotlight last month with his latest documentary, “An Inconvenient Sequel,” he did so in gilded armor.

The former vice president ― who boasted a relatively modest net worth of $1.7 million, held mostly in family farm assets, when he ran for president in 2000 ― has become a media mogul and financial titan over the past decade, with a personal fortune valued at upward of $200 million.

His big comeback comes months after a populist wave swept President Donald Trump to a surprise election victory, setting the stage for the most aggressive rollback of environmental and climate policies in history.

If Trump’s billionaire status bolstered his appeal to voters, Gore’s business acumen might amplify his warnings at this moment.

“The world faces an extremely serious financial risk due to the $22 trillion in subprime carbon assets that are going to lose value at some point precipitously, just as the subprime mortgages did,

” Gore told HuffPost in a 14-minute phone interview from London last week. “Of course, that’s what triggered the credit crisis and the Great Recession.”

But for some people, the best person to imbue climate change with the urgency it needs may not be a rich, banker-friendly liberal who rode shotgun in a White House that brought about trade deals so vilified that Trump won over traditionally Democratic Rust Belt workers by vowing to renegotiate them.

“He is a flawed character,” Stephen Lacey, editor-in-chief of the magazine GreenTechMedia, said on his podcast “The Energy Gang” last month. “We’re in an era of backlash against elites,

so Gore, a guy who bought a 6,500-square-foot seafront home in California for $8.8 million, and who hangs around with other celebrities who talk big on climate but who live lavish lifestyles, is the perfect target at this point in time.”
0040SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/20(日) 14:24:51.43
Dick Gregory, the pioneering standup comedian and civil rights activist who made his advocacy work a key component of his on-stage persona, died Saturday night in Washington, D.C. He was 84.

Gregory’s death was confirmed by his family in an Instagram post.

“The family appreciates the outpouring of support and love and respectfully asks for their privacy as they grieve during this very difficult time,” read the post from son Christian Gregory.

Gregory was active on the standup and public speaking circuit on and off for more than a half-century. He had recently been making comedy appearances until he was hospitalized on Aug. 9.

Gregory recently released a new book, “Defining Moments in Black History: Reading Between the Lies,” and he recently penned a guest column for Variety on how communities can band together to end police brutality.

In June Gregory was the subject of a lengthy profile on “CBS Sunday Morning.” Actor Joe Morton explored the ups and downs of Gregory’s standup career in the one-man show “Turn Me Loose,” which ran in New York last year.

Gregory made his mark in the early 1960s as a rare African-American comedian who was successfu in nightclubs geared to white audiences. One important break famously came in 1960 when he was invited by Playboy founder Hugh Hefner to perform at his Playboy Lounge in Chicago.
0041SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/20(日) 14:25:37.42
On Saturday, Donald Trump posted a tweet saying he understands that protest is a part of America’s history and is necessary to heal social divides. That’s what he meant to tweet but, unfortunately for the president, that’s not what his thumbs typed out.

Instead, his tweet contained an embarrassing typo that has quickly become a Twitter joke similar to the now infamous “covfefe” mishap.

“Sometimes you need to protest in order to heel [sic],” read the tweet. “& we will heel [sic], & be stronger than before!”

Just to be clear, “heal” is defined as recover, mend, make better. “Heel,” as the POTUS wrote, is the bottom, back part of your foot, an untrustworthy person, or a command a master makes to his dog to stick close behind.

Also Read: Trump Calls Peaceful Boston Protesters 'Agitators'

The president deleted two versions of the tweet before posting one with the proper spelling, but by the time he fixed his mistake, his Twitter critics had already started roasting him.
0042SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/20(日) 14:26:23.75
The Colin Kaepernick story has gotten seemingly endless attention because its reach goes far beyond football.

A pretty good reminder of that came Saturday afternoon in New York City, which is far removed from Kaepernick’s former NFL home of San Francisco.

At a rally in Brooklyn, dozens of current and former New York police officers wore shirts that said “#WeStandWithKap” and at the end of the rally they took a knee and raised their fist, according to the New York Daily News.

Kaepernick became a household name when he took a knee for the national anthem last season to bring attention to racial injustice, including police brutality. It also appears to be one reason he has not been signed by any NFL team this offseason.

The police officers noted to the Daily News that they were speaking out against their belief that NFL teams aren’t signing Kaepernick as punishment for his protest.

“What Colin Kaepernick did is try to bring awareness that this nation unfortunately has ignored for far too long,” said NYPD Sgt. Edwin Raymond, an organizer of the rally, according to the Daily News.

“And that’s the issue of racism in America and policing in America. We decided to gather here today because of the way he’s being railroaded for speaking the obvious truth.”
0043SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/20(日) 14:27:15.19
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump's racially fraught comments about a deadly neo-Nazi rally have thrust into the open some Republicans' deeply held doubts about his competency and temperament, in an extraordinary public airing of worries and grievances about a sitting president by his own party.

Behind the high-profile denunciations voiced this week by GOP senators once considered Trump allies, scores of other, influential Republicans began to express grave concerns about the state of the Trump presidency.

In two dozen interviews with Associated Press reporters across nine states, Republican politicians, party officials, advisers and donors expressed worries about whether Trump has the self-discipline and capability to govern successfully.

Eric Cantor, the former House minority leader from Virginia, said Republicans signaled this week that Trump's handling of the Charlottesville protests was "beyond just a distraction."

"It was a turning point in terms of Republicans being able to say, we're not even going to get close to that," Cantor said.

Chip Lake, a Georgia-based GOP operative who did not vote for Trump in the general election, raised the prospect of the president leaving office before his term is up.
0044SIM無しさん垢版2017/08/20(日) 14:28:28.06
The World Umpires Associated, the union that represents Major League Baseball umpires, released a statement on Saturday announcing that umpires have started wearing white wristbands in collective protest to what it calls

“escalating verbal attacks on umpires and their strong objection to the Office of the Commissioner’s response to the verbal attacks.”

The statement specifically notes Ian Kinsler’s very public criticism of Angel Hernandez following his ejection from a game on Monday.

The league levied a fine against Kinsler after he told reporters that Hernandez should consider a new career and had to stop ruining baseball games. The umpires believed Kinsler’s comments warranted a suspension.

Here’s the full statement from the union:

And here’s the text as it pertains to Kinsler.

“This week, a player publicly and harshly impugned the character and integrity of Angel Hernandez ― a veteran umpire who has dedicated his career to baseball and the community. The verbal attack on Angel denigrated the entire MLB umpiring staff and is unacceptable.

The Office of the Commissioner has failed to address this and other escalating attacks on umpires. The player who denigrated Hernandez publicly said he thought he would be suspended. Instead got far more lenient treatment ― a fine. He shrugged that off and told reporters he has ‘no regrets’ about his offensive statements calling for an end to Hernandez’s career.
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