Reuters: U.S.

Thursday, August 3, 2017

Give me your skilled

Immigration ... US and Russia ... Baltimore cops ... Venezuela ... NAACP
Thursday, August 3, 2017
Meet the woman who retired with $2 million -- at 28. Here's what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and Out the Door.

By Doug Criss.

1. Immigration

A hard-line stance against illegal immigration helped get Donald Trump elected; now he's throwing his weight behind a proposal to curb legal immigration. The President said he supports a bill by a pair of GOP senators that would cut legal immigration into the US by emphasizing skilled labor and severely limiting the types of immigrants' relatives who can come to the US. The new system would be merit-based, with green cards based on skills, education, ability to speak English and whether they could afford their own health care. Reaction in Congress was mixed.

CNN's Jim Acosta got in a heated exchange with a White House adviser about the proposal. Acosta, the son of a Cuban immigrant, asked whether limiting entry flies in the face of the poem on the base of Statue of Liberty that invites the world's "tired ... poor ... huddled masses." The adviser said the poem wasn't originally on the statue and speaking English already is required of immigrants.

Meanwhile, in Canada, our neighbors to the north have opened up the doors to Montreal's Olympic Stadium as a temporary shelter of sorts to deal with the huge numbers of asylum seekers, many of them from the US.

2. US and Russia

President Trump signed the Russia sanctions bill into law, but he didn't seem too pleased about it. The law hits Russia with new sanctions and hampers Trump's ability to ease them. Trump said the law is "seriously flawed" because it encroaches on the executive branch's powers. The White House said it has "clearly unconstitutional provisions." The Russians, of course, aren't happy about it either, and it highlights just how bad relations are right now between the two countries. Some say things haven't been this bad since the Cold War.

3. Baltimore police

Public defenders in Baltimore say police body-camera video shows officers working together to fake evidence. The video, from a November 2016 drug bust, shows an officer finding drugs that another officer allegedly had planted just moments earlier. It's the second video showing such alleged misconduct by Baltimore police in the past couple of weeks, and city prosecutors have been forced to dismiss dozens of criminal cases involving the accused cops. An investigation into this latest allegation has begun, and the police commissioner asked the public to wait for it to finish before passing judgment.

4. Venezuela

The country's attorney general has started an investigation into possible voter fraud during Sunday's controversial election for a new national assembly. This comes after allegations from Smartmatic -- the London-based company that provided the voting technology -- that turnout figures were off by 1 million votes and had been "tampered with." Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro dismissed the allegations.

The new national assembly, controversial because it's filled with Maduro's supporters and will have the power to rewrite Venezuela's constitution, will meet Friday for the first time.

5. NAACP

If you're a person of color and plan to travel through Missouri soon, the NAACP has a warning: Go at your own risk. The Missouri chapter of the civil rights organization issued a travel advisory after the state passed a law that the NAACP says allows for legal discrimination. The advisory is a first for the group, but just what does it mean? Well, it doesn't tell people to not to go to Missouri but seeks to warn minorities of potential risks. As the president of the state NAACP chapter put it, if people of color go to Missouri, "they should have bail money; you never know."
20 years
That's how much prison time Michelle Carter could get when she's sentenced today in the texting suicide case.
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