U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Samuel Alito, Jr is seen during a group portrait session for the new full court at the Supreme Court in Washington, U.S., November 30, 2018. REUTERS/Jim Young
Hear Supreme Court arguments about LGBTQ workers' rights (2019)
03:39 - Source: CNN
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    1. Police reform

    The Supreme Court delivered a huge win for LGBTQ rights by ruling that federal civil rights law protects gay, lesbian and transgender workers. The opinion, written by Justice Neil Gorsuch, argues, “An employer who fires an individual for being homosexual or transgender fires that person for traits or actions it would not have questioned in members of a different sex. Sex plays a necessary and undisguisable role in the decision, exactly what Title VII forbids.” The landmark 6-3 ruling yesterday will extend protections to millions of workers. It’s also a clear rebuke of the White House’s recent attempts to cut into LGBTQ protections. The White House has argued that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which bars discrimination based on sex, does not cover gender identity and sexual orientation. The administration last week announced it was scrapping regulations that bar discrimination in health care against patients who are transgender.

    Jeffrey Toobin 06152020
    Toobin: This is fascinating and enormously important
    01:36 - Source: CNN

    MONDAY

    North Korea has blown up – as in, completely destroyed – an office used for talks between itself and South Korea. If ever there were a sign that the relationship between the adversaries is deteriorating, this is it. The building has been closed for months due to the coronavirus, but it was obviously a symbol of goodwill between the nations. North Korea says it decided to raze the office as yet another retaliatory measure against South Korea after defectors used balloons to send anti-North Korean leaflets north of the DMZ. The country recently announced it is cutting all ties with South Korea over the incident and will remilitarize parts of the Korean border that have been dormant for years. It’s illegal – and extremely risky – for average North Koreans to consume literature or entertainment that’s not approved by the government. Experts also suspect North Korea’s recent actions may be its attempt to gin up a crisis.

    north korea Kaesong liaison office smoke
    North Korea blows up liaison office with South Korea
    03:28 - Source: CNN

    3. Election 2020

    Several disturbing incidents have marred recent Black Lives Matter demonstrations. A man was shot and wounded last night during a protest in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and police suspect vigilante groups may be to blame. In Portland, Oregon, police closed parts of downtown and declared a civil disturbance after a police officer was hit in the head with a large rock. In New York City, three police officers were briefly hospitalized after drinking shakes from Shake Shack that may have been tainted with bleach; the NYPD found “no criminality” by restaurant employees. And in Florida, a 19-year-old Black Lives Matter activist named Oluwatoyin “Toyin” Salau was found dead a week after she went missing. On the last day anyone saw her, she had tweeted about being sexually assaulted. Police have arrested a suspect.

    police chief Quinones ac360
    SWAT team resigns after police chief kneels with protesters
    02:58 - Source: CNN

    4. Coronavirus

    President Trump is expected to sign an executive order on police reform today. The order will establish a national certification system for law enforcement agencies and a database to better track excessive use of force by officers nationwide, plus encourage departments to shore up mental health resources for responses related to mental health, homelessness and addiction. It’s a modest step and leaves the door open for more significant action from Congress. To that end, Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill are working to advance two competing bills. The Democratic measure is more stringent and proposes banning no-knock warrants and chokeholds. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has likened chokeholds to lynching and says she thinks her Republican counterparts will agree to such a ban.

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    Pelosi: Chokehold is a lynching. It's a strangulation
    03:18 - Source: CNN

    5. Nigeria

    The US could see more than 200,000 deaths from Covid-19 by the beginning of October. That’s the staggering new prediction from a closely watched model put out by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington. At this point, experts agree a second wave is all but inevitable as more areas open up. Not to mention, cases are continuing to rise in at least 18 states. Meanwhile, the FDA has revoked its emergency use authorization for the drugs hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine to treat Covid-19. Hydroxychloroquine is the drug touted by President Trump, who claims to have taken it himself. The FDA says the drugs don’t meet the criteria for emergency use, and the latest scientific evidence shows they may not be effective against the disease.

    Beijing new lockdown
    Beijing reintroduces strict lockdown following new outbreak
    02:08 - Source: CNN

    THIS JUST IN

    Deadly clash along the China-India border

    Three Indian soldiers have been killed during a “violent face-off” with Chinese troops along the countries’ de facto border in the Himalayas, the Indian army said. This is the first time in over four decades there have been any casualties along the disputed border.

    China aircraft carrier
    China flexes military muscle amid coronavirus pandemic
    04:00 - Source: CNN

    BREAKFAST BROWSE

    A woman asked the Merriam-Webster people to update their definition of ‘racism.’ They listened

    Everyone is showing up in their own way.

    01 paddle out new york

    The Oscars have been delayed until April 2021

    That designer evening gown is going to have to wait.

    A new Fortnite event reached capacity in just one minute, and gamers are mad

    C’mon, our virtual events are all we have right now.

    Tyler 'Ninja' Blevins streams himself playing the popular video game Fortnite. Blevins is considered one of the most popular video gamers in the world making over $500,000 per month playing the game.
    How he makes $500,000 a month playing video games (2018)
    01:55 - Source: CNN Business

    There could be 36 communicating intelligent civilizations in our galaxy

    Show yourself, civilizations! We could use a friend.

    Here are the 2020 BET Awards nominees

    It’s a good day to be Drake and Megan Thee Stallion.

    TODAY’S NUMBER

    12 million

    That’s how many calls a health insurance telemarketing group called Rising Eagle allegedly made in the first half of 2019, in violation of Federal Communications Commission rules. The US government is seeking fines of up to a record-breaking $225 million.

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    Kudlow: Extra $600 unemployment checks 'may well stop'
    03:56 - Source: CNN

    TODAY’S QUOTE

    “Ebola was scary, but Ebola would never be easily transmitted … HIV, as important as it is, was drawn out and over an extended period of time … Now, we have something that turned out to be my worst nightmare.”

    Former US Marine Paul Whelan, who was convicted of espionage in Moscow and sentenced to 16 years in prison after Russian authorities alleged he was involved in an intelligence operation

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    Russia sentences U.S. citizen Paul Whelan to 16 years in prison, claims he was engaged in 'espionage'
    01:38 - Source: CNN

    TODAY’S WEATHER

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    Extreme heat pushing into the Midwest
    01:58 - Source: CNN

    Check your local forecast here>>>

    AND FINALLY

    Ticka-ticka-ticka-BING!

    We love the concept of typewriters as instruments. Behold, the Boston Typewriter Orchestra performs … from home. (Click here to view.)