Shohei Ohtani 1st Player Since Babe Ruth to Pitch 50 Innings and Hit 15 Homers

HOUSTON, TX - SEPTEMBER 02:  Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim pitches in the first inning against the Houston Astros at Minute Maid Park on September 2, 2018 in Houston, Texas.  (Photo by Bob Levey/Getty Images)

Bob Levey/Getty Images

On Sunday, Shohei Ohtani accomplished something we haven’t seen in the majors since 1919.

After retiring two Houston Astros hitters, Ohtani hit a statistical threshold last achieved by Babe Ruth, via SportsCenter:

SportsCenter @SportsCenter

Shohei Ohtani is the first player since Babe Ruth in 1919 with 50 IP and 15 HR in a single season.

That’s 99 years! https://t.co/0h1kPJL4wL

The two-way player already had 15 home runs on the season as a hitter but was sitting on 49.1 innings pitched until Sunday’s start.

Although the Japanese star allowed two runs in 2.1 innings on a George Springer two-run homer, it only raised his ERA to 3.31 on the season.

Ohtani threw only 49 pitches in his first appearance as a pitcher since June 6. An elbow injury has kept him off the mound and only in the batter’s box.

The good news is he has been as good as advertised as a hitter, producing a .276 batting average and .897 OPS in 80 appearances this season. In addition to his 15 home runs, he also has 16 doubles and 43 RBI.

In a sport where most players specialize as hitters or pitchers, the 24-year-old has shown the ability to excel in both.

Any time you are in the same category as Ruth it is also a major accomplishment. The Hall of Famer mostly abandoned his pitching career after being sold to the New York Yankees in 1920, but he had 2.97 ERA in 133.1 innings in 1919.

He also happened to lead the majors with 29 home runs that season.

Considering he went on to hit 714 home runs in his career, focusing on hitting was probably the right move.

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Myanmar court sentences Reuters reporters to seven years in jail

A Myanmar court has sentenced two Reuters news agency journalists to seven years in prison for illegal possession of official documents, a ruling that comes as international criticism mounts over the military’s alleged human rights abuses against Rohingya Muslims.

Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, who investigated massacre of Rohingya men, had pleaded not guilty to violating the colonial-era Official Secrets Act, punishable by up to 14 years in prison. They contended they were framed by police.

The verdict was postponed from a week ago because the presiding judge was ill.

The case has drawn worldwide attention as an example of how press freedom is suffering under the government of Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.

Her taking power in 2016 had raised hopes for an accelerated transition to full democracy from military rule, but she has since disappointed many former admirers.

“What happened today threatens to undermine the rule of law and freedom of press that democracy requires,” said Kevin Krolicki, Reuters’ regional editor for Asia. He called the verdict “heartbreaking”.

Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, both testified they suffered from harsh treatment during their initial interrogations.

Their several appeals for release on bail were rejected. Wa Lone’s wife, Pan Ei Mon, gave birth to the couple’s first child in Yangon on Aug. 10, but Wa Lone has not yet seen his daughter.

The two journalists had been reporting last year on the brutal crackdown by security forces on the Rohingya in Myanmar’s Rakhine state.

‘Accusation of genocide’

About 700,000 Rohingya fled to neighbouring Bangladesh to escape the violence targeting them after attacks by Rohingya figthers killed a dozen members of the security forces.

Investigators working for the UN’s top human rights body said last week that genocide charges should be brought against senior Myanmar military officers over the crackdown.

The accusation of genocide was rejected by Myanmar’s government, but is the most serious official recommendation for prosecution so far.

Also last week, Facebook banned Myanmar’s powerful military chief and 19 other individuals and organisations from its site to prevent the spread of hate and misinformation in connection with the Rohingya crisis.

Dozens of journalists and pro-democracy activists marched Saturday in Yangon, Myanmar’s biggest city, in support of the reporters.

But in the country at large, with an overwhelming Buddhist majority, there is widespread prejudice against the Rohingya, and in the government and military, there is near-xenophobic sensitivity to foreign criticism.

Myanmar’s courts are one of the country’s most conservative and nationalistic institutions, and the darkened political atmosphere had seemed unlikely to help the reporters’ cause.

This is a major step backward in Myanmar’s transition to democracy, cannot be squared with the rule of law or freedom of speech.

Stephen J Adler, Reuters Editor-in-Chief

The court earlier this year declined to stop the trial after an initial phase of presentation of evidence, even though a policeman called as a prosecution witness testified that his commander had ordered that documents be planted on the journalists.

After his testimony, the officer was jailed for a year for violating police regulations and his family was kicked out of police housing.

Other testimony by prosecution witnesses was contradictory, and the documents presented as evidence against the reporters appeared to be neither secret nor sensitive. The journalists testified they did not solicit or knowingly possess any secret documents.

UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Myanmar Knut Ostby said the UN was “disappointed by today’s court decision”.

“The United Nations has consistently called for the release of the Reuters journalists and urged the authorities to respect their right to pursue freedom of expression and information,” he said.

“Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo should be allowed to return to their families and continue their work as journalists.”

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Miami vs. LSU: Live Updates, Score and Highlights

  1. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Halftime Stats

    Malik Rosier (UM): 7-of-15, 94 YDS, 1 INT
    DeeJay Dallas (UM): 7 CAR, 29 YDS
    Lawrence Cager (UM): 1 REC, 36 YDS

    Joe Burrow (LSU): 8-of-1, 101 YDS
    Nick Brossette (LSU): 8 CAR, 70 YDS, 2 TD
    Justin Jefferson (LSU): 3 REC, 51 YDS

  2. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Scott Rabalais @RabalaisAdv

    Burrow takes a knee on first down. A couple of boos but it’s the smart play. #LSU will run out the clock and take its 27-3 lead into the locker room.

  3. Clock Icon8 minutes ago

    James Moran @SmartestMoran

    Wow…

    Miami gets called for leaping and it’s an automatic first down for #LSU

  4. Clock Icon11 minutes ago

    LSU Football @LSUfootball

    Swarmin’ Out Here https://t.co/ZI1BY7O9oe

  5. Clock Icon15 minutes ago

    James Moran @SmartestMoran

    Rosier air mails an open receiver and Miami will punt again

    Wonder how aggressive #LSU will be in the final two minutes

  6. Clock Icon20 minutes ago

    2⃣9⃣ @DhaSickest

    Y’all just don’t understand how happy I am for this LSU team

  7. Clock Icon23 minutes ago

    Ben Baby @Ben_Baby

    LSU is rolling in Arlington. Jacob Phillips returns an interception for a 45-yard TD. Tigers up 27-3 with 4:21 left in the first half. Yikes.

  8. Clock Icon26 minutes ago

    Andrea Adelson @aadelsonESPN

    Really expected much more out of Miami in this game. It’s like 2017 picked up where it left off.

  9. Clock Icon29 minutes ago

    LSU 20, Miami 3 (Late 2nd Quarter)

    Tracy knocks home a 20-yard kick, and the Tigers hold a three-possession lead.

    Can Miami play a mistake-free possession? Until that answer is yes, the ‘Canes won’t be scoring any points.

  10. Clock Icon33 minutes ago

    LSU Football @LSUfootball

    🗣DEFENSE STAND UP https://t.co/PyQj5AuNGt

  11. Clock Icon36 minutes ago

    Tim Reynolds @ByTimReynolds

    Feagles averaging 25.3 yards per punt tonight. The “good punt” chain hasn’t come out yet either.

  12. Clock Icon42 minutes ago

    Susan Miller Degnan @smillerdegnan

    Brossette’s 1-yard plunge makes it 17-3 LSU with 9:21 left in the second quarter.

  13. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    Scott Rabalais @RabalaisAdv

    #LSU goes for it on 4th down again and draws Miami offside.
    That’s two onions, isn’t it?
    Tigers ball at the Canes 33, and a real chance at putting Miami in a big hole.

  14. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    Jeff Duncan @JeffDuncan_

    The Tigers are having trouble blocking Gerald Willis.

  15. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    1st Quarter Stats

    Malik Rosier (UM): 6-of-11, 86 YDS
    DeeJay Dallas (UM): 2 CAR, 13 YDS
    Lawrence Cager (UM): 1 REC, 36 YDS

    Joe Burrow (LSU): 4-of-9, 31 YDS
    Nick Brossette (LSU): 2 CAR, 52 YDS, 1 TD
    Justin Jefferson (LSU): 1 REC, 12 YDS

  16. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    LSU Football @LSUfootball

    After 1⃣ in Arlington https://t.co/YF2Wkmzu0g

  17. Clock Icon12:32 am

    Ross Dellenger @RossDellenger

    Nick Brossette bursts through a wide chasm at the center of #Miami’s defense, and #LSU is in the end zone. A 50-yard jaunt.

  18. Clock Icon12:27 am

    Canes Football @CanesFootball

    Baxa’s 45-yard attempt is no good.

    LSU takes over on their own 28-yard line.

  19. Clock Icon12:25 am

    James Moran @SmartestMoran

    Greedy Williams was shaken up on that last play.

    #LSU

  20. Clock Icon12:23 am

    Scott Rabalais @RabalaisAdv

    #LSU uses up its third and final first-half time out with 3:05 left in the first quarter.
    You know what they say – you can’t take them into the second half.
    You’d like to take them into the second quarter, though.

  21. Clock Icon12:21 am

    Christy Chirinos @ChristyChirinos

    By the way, a ton went on pre-game, but don’t want to let more time pass before sharing this, the decal the Hurricanes are wearing on their helmets to honor the victims of the Stoneman Douglas shooting. https://t.co/uv9QsWXpm8

  22. Clock Icon12:16 am

    Manny Navarro @Manny_Navarro

    Michael Jackson with the scoop and score. Play was called a fumble on the field. But I’m sure it’s under review. Garvin with the forced fumble if it stands. But it looked like Burrow’s arm went forward. So, don’t expect this to stand.

  23. Clock Icon12:14 am

    James Moran @SmartestMoran

    Coming out of the timeout, Joe Burrow is sacked.

    Gerald Willis, NOLA native, collapsed the pocket

  24. Clock Icon12:08 am

    Christy Chirinos @ChristyChirinos

    Bubba Baxa from 38 yards. He hits it.

    Welcome to the show, freshman.

  25. Clock Icon12:07 am

    Ian Wharton @NFLFilmStudy

    another insane catch this weekend https://t.co/CrqLARPgz4

  26. Clock Icon12:04 am

    Anthony Chiang @Anthony_Chiang

    Two consecutive completions for the Hurricanes, and all of a sudden Miami is at LSU’s 23. Hurricanes using up-tempo offense.

  27. Clock Icon12:02 am

    Bleacher Report CFB @BR_CFB

    Secure the Turnover Chain 💼

    (via @sportsiren) https://t.co/usBvRiyAib

  28. Clock Icon12:00 am

    LSU 3, Miami 0 (Mid-1st Quarter)

    Cole Tracy buries a 43-yard field goal to put LSU in front.

  29. September 2, 2018
  30. Clock Icon11:56 pm

    Tim Reynolds @ByTimReynolds

    Trajan Bandy has been ejected for targeting on the play where LSU fumbled. LSU couldn’t get the play off, called time, and that ultimately led to review where Bandy’s night ended before it even started.

  31. Clock Icon11:50 pm

    Cody Worsham @CodyWorsham

    LSU picks up the first down. Burrow to Anderson. Looks like Anderson recovered his own fumble.

  32. Clock Icon11:46 pm

    Scott Rabalais @RabalaisAdv

    #LSU gets the 3 and out to start, and Ed Paris nearly gets a block.
    Ball goes OB at #Miami 47.
    Here is Joe Burrow and the offense…

  33. Clock Icon11:43 pm

    Christy Chirinos @ChristyChirinos

    LSU wins the toss and defers to the second half. Official warns both team during the pregame coin toss to keep it to football tonight.

  34. Clock Icon11:43 pm

    What’s At Stake

    Miami is a fringe championship contender, and a marquee nonconference victory would help in College Football Playoff rankings discussions.

    LSU, meanwhile, needs a fast start to a season in which Ed Orgeron’s seat is warm to begin.

  35. Clock Icon11:37 pm

    LSU Football @LSUfootball

    HERE COME THE TIGERS! https://t.co/CTRv2QlNXX

  36. Clock Icon11:32 pm

    Ross Dellenger @RossDellenger

    Go time https://t.co/KTxz6P6z7J

  37. Clock Icon11:27 pm

    James Moran @SmartestMoran

    All of tonight’s honorary captains are current or former Dallas Cowboys

    For #LSU: La’el Collins and Bradie James
    For Miami: Michael Irvin and Russell Maryland

  38. Clock Icon11:24 pm

    Miami Hurricanes @MiamiHurricanes

    Canes on the field, Canes in the stands, uniforms ready.

    It’s almost time to ball in Dallas. https://t.co/MQtkB1XXZX

  39. Clock Icon11:10 pm

    via Bleacher Report

  40. Clock Icon10:55 pm

    Billy Embody @BillyEmbody

    #LSU-#Miami bound to be a dandy. Pregame disagreements aplenty. @247Sports https://t.co/G2TxsNlKJ9

  41. Clock Icon10:43 pm

    PFF College @PFF_College

    LSU vs Miami – who gets the better of their opponent today: Greedy Williams or Michael Jackson? https://t.co/k6UMhVGtzK

  42. Clock Icon10:30 pm

    Darren Rovell @darrenrovell

    Jerseys Miami will wear tonight versus LSU are made from upcycled marine waste https://t.co/aK2zdPTrWM

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Miami vs. LSU: Live Updates, Score and Highlights

  1. Clock Icon1 minute ago

    Halftime Stats

    Malik Rosier (UM): 7-of-15, 94 YDS, 1 INT
    DeeJay Dallas (UM): 7 CAR, 29 YDS
    Lawrence Cager (UM): 1 REC, 36 YDS

    Joe Burrow (LSU): 8-of-1, 101 YDS
    Nick Brossette (LSU): 8 CAR, 70 YDS, 2 TD
    Justin Jefferson (LSU): 3 REC, 51 YDS

  2. Clock Icon5 minutes ago

    Scott Rabalais @RabalaisAdv

    Burrow takes a knee on first down. A couple of boos but it’s the smart play. #LSU will run out the clock and take its 27-3 lead into the locker room.

  3. Clock Icon8 minutes ago

    James Moran @SmartestMoran

    Wow…

    Miami gets called for leaping and it’s an automatic first down for #LSU

  4. Clock Icon11 minutes ago

    LSU Football @LSUfootball

    Swarmin’ Out Here https://t.co/ZI1BY7O9oe

  5. Clock Icon15 minutes ago

    James Moran @SmartestMoran

    Rosier air mails an open receiver and Miami will punt again

    Wonder how aggressive #LSU will be in the final two minutes

  6. Clock Icon20 minutes ago

    2⃣9⃣ @DhaSickest

    Y’all just don’t understand how happy I am for this LSU team

  7. Clock Icon23 minutes ago

    Ben Baby @Ben_Baby

    LSU is rolling in Arlington. Jacob Phillips returns an interception for a 45-yard TD. Tigers up 27-3 with 4:21 left in the first half. Yikes.

  8. Clock Icon26 minutes ago

    Andrea Adelson @aadelsonESPN

    Really expected much more out of Miami in this game. It’s like 2017 picked up where it left off.

  9. Clock Icon29 minutes ago

    LSU 20, Miami 3 (Late 2nd Quarter)

    Tracy knocks home a 20-yard kick, and the Tigers hold a three-possession lead.

    Can Miami play a mistake-free possession? Until that answer is yes, the ‘Canes won’t be scoring any points.

  10. Clock Icon33 minutes ago

    LSU Football @LSUfootball

    🗣DEFENSE STAND UP https://t.co/PyQj5AuNGt

  11. Clock Icon36 minutes ago

    Tim Reynolds @ByTimReynolds

    Feagles averaging 25.3 yards per punt tonight. The “good punt” chain hasn’t come out yet either.

  12. Clock Icon42 minutes ago

    Susan Miller Degnan @smillerdegnan

    Brossette’s 1-yard plunge makes it 17-3 LSU with 9:21 left in the second quarter.

  13. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    Scott Rabalais @RabalaisAdv

    #LSU goes for it on 4th down again and draws Miami offside.
    That’s two onions, isn’t it?
    Tigers ball at the Canes 33, and a real chance at putting Miami in a big hole.

  14. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    Jeff Duncan @JeffDuncan_

    The Tigers are having trouble blocking Gerald Willis.

  15. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    1st Quarter Stats

    Malik Rosier (UM): 6-of-11, 86 YDS
    DeeJay Dallas (UM): 2 CAR, 13 YDS
    Lawrence Cager (UM): 1 REC, 36 YDS

    Joe Burrow (LSU): 4-of-9, 31 YDS
    Nick Brossette (LSU): 2 CAR, 52 YDS, 1 TD
    Justin Jefferson (LSU): 1 REC, 12 YDS

  16. Clock Iconabout 1 hour ago

    LSU Football @LSUfootball

    After 1⃣ in Arlington https://t.co/YF2Wkmzu0g

  17. Clock Icon12:32 am

    Ross Dellenger @RossDellenger

    Nick Brossette bursts through a wide chasm at the center of #Miami’s defense, and #LSU is in the end zone. A 50-yard jaunt.

  18. Clock Icon12:27 am

    Canes Football @CanesFootball

    Baxa’s 45-yard attempt is no good.

    LSU takes over on their own 28-yard line.

  19. Clock Icon12:25 am

    James Moran @SmartestMoran

    Greedy Williams was shaken up on that last play.

    #LSU

  20. Clock Icon12:23 am

    Scott Rabalais @RabalaisAdv

    #LSU uses up its third and final first-half time out with 3:05 left in the first quarter.
    You know what they say – you can’t take them into the second half.
    You’d like to take them into the second quarter, though.

  21. Clock Icon12:21 am

    Christy Chirinos @ChristyChirinos

    By the way, a ton went on pre-game, but don’t want to let more time pass before sharing this, the decal the Hurricanes are wearing on their helmets to honor the victims of the Stoneman Douglas shooting. https://t.co/uv9QsWXpm8

  22. Clock Icon12:16 am

    Manny Navarro @Manny_Navarro

    Michael Jackson with the scoop and score. Play was called a fumble on the field. But I’m sure it’s under review. Garvin with the forced fumble if it stands. But it looked like Burrow’s arm went forward. So, don’t expect this to stand.

  23. Clock Icon12:14 am

    James Moran @SmartestMoran

    Coming out of the timeout, Joe Burrow is sacked.

    Gerald Willis, NOLA native, collapsed the pocket

  24. Clock Icon12:08 am

    Christy Chirinos @ChristyChirinos

    Bubba Baxa from 38 yards. He hits it.

    Welcome to the show, freshman.

  25. Clock Icon12:07 am

    Ian Wharton @NFLFilmStudy

    another insane catch this weekend https://t.co/CrqLARPgz4

  26. Clock Icon12:04 am

    Anthony Chiang @Anthony_Chiang

    Two consecutive completions for the Hurricanes, and all of a sudden Miami is at LSU’s 23. Hurricanes using up-tempo offense.

  27. Clock Icon12:02 am

    Bleacher Report CFB @BR_CFB

    Secure the Turnover Chain 💼

    (via @sportsiren) https://t.co/usBvRiyAib

  28. Clock Icon12:00 am

    LSU 3, Miami 0 (Mid-1st Quarter)

    Cole Tracy buries a 43-yard field goal to put LSU in front.

  29. September 2, 2018
  30. Clock Icon11:56 pm

    Tim Reynolds @ByTimReynolds

    Trajan Bandy has been ejected for targeting on the play where LSU fumbled. LSU couldn’t get the play off, called time, and that ultimately led to review where Bandy’s night ended before it even started.

  31. Clock Icon11:50 pm

    Cody Worsham @CodyWorsham

    LSU picks up the first down. Burrow to Anderson. Looks like Anderson recovered his own fumble.

  32. Clock Icon11:46 pm

    Scott Rabalais @RabalaisAdv

    #LSU gets the 3 and out to start, and Ed Paris nearly gets a block.
    Ball goes OB at #Miami 47.
    Here is Joe Burrow and the offense…

  33. Clock Icon11:43 pm

    Christy Chirinos @ChristyChirinos

    LSU wins the toss and defers to the second half. Official warns both team during the pregame coin toss to keep it to football tonight.

  34. Clock Icon11:43 pm

    What’s At Stake

    Miami is a fringe championship contender, and a marquee nonconference victory would help in College Football Playoff rankings discussions.

    LSU, meanwhile, needs a fast start to a season in which Ed Orgeron’s seat is warm to begin.

  35. Clock Icon11:37 pm

    LSU Football @LSUfootball

    HERE COME THE TIGERS! https://t.co/CTRv2QlNXX

  36. Clock Icon11:32 pm

    Ross Dellenger @RossDellenger

    Go time https://t.co/KTxz6P6z7J

  37. Clock Icon11:27 pm

    James Moran @SmartestMoran

    All of tonight’s honorary captains are current or former Dallas Cowboys

    For #LSU: La’el Collins and Bradie James
    For Miami: Michael Irvin and Russell Maryland

  38. Clock Icon11:24 pm

    Miami Hurricanes @MiamiHurricanes

    Canes on the field, Canes in the stands, uniforms ready.

    It’s almost time to ball in Dallas. https://t.co/MQtkB1XXZX

  39. Clock Icon11:10 pm

    via Bleacher Report

  40. Clock Icon10:55 pm

    Billy Embody @BillyEmbody

    #LSU-#Miami bound to be a dandy. Pregame disagreements aplenty. @247Sports https://t.co/G2TxsNlKJ9

  41. Clock Icon10:43 pm

    PFF College @PFF_College

    LSU vs Miami – who gets the better of their opponent today: Greedy Williams or Michael Jackson? https://t.co/k6UMhVGtzK

  42. Clock Icon10:30 pm

    Darren Rovell @darrenrovell

    Jerseys Miami will wear tonight versus LSU are made from upcycled marine waste https://t.co/aK2zdPTrWM

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Germany’s Islam problem

A protester holds up a sign reading “Whoever doesn’t love Germany should leave Germany” in Chemnitz, Germany on September 1, 2018 | Sean Gallup/Getty Images

A series of violent crimes committed by refugees is unsettling the nation.

BERLIN — Can Germany survive Islam?

That question is once again at the center of the country’s public discourse amid the violent protests that followed last week’s brutal killing of a German man, allegedly at the hands of two Muslim refugees, and the publication of a new book titled “Hostile Takeover, how Islam halts progress and threatens society.”

On Saturday, about 11,000 people (8,000 right-wing and far-right protesters and about 3,000 anti-Nazis, according to police estimates) took to the streets of the eastern German city of Chemnitz, where the killing occurred. Eighteen people were injured, including a TV reporter who was thrown down a flight of stairs.

There’s nothing new about such clashes, or even the debate over Islam. What the past week reveals, however, is the degree to which the refugee influx since 2015 continues to dominate the country’s politics and fuel support for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD). The pictures of marauding neo-Nazis in Chemnitz suggest the German government has largely failed to keep the violent extreme right in check, despite decades of trying.

By all rights, Germany should be celebrating a golden era. Unemployment is the lowest it’s been since reunification amid robust economic growth. The country’s public debt is on course to fall below 60 percent of gross domestic product this year, meaning Berlin will fulfill the Maastricht criteria for the first time in almost 20 years.

About 170,000 migrants enjoy “tolerated” status in Germany. A further 350,000 reside in the country with no official immigration status at all.

Despite Germany’s growing prosperity, its society is seething as the negative consequences of taking in more than 1 million asylum seekers since 2015 sink in. “Who should be allowed in?” asked Der Spiegel on its cover last week. This week’s cover, devoted to Saxony, the state where the violence occurred, reads: “When the right grabs power.”

Thilo Sarrazin, the former Bundesbank official and provocateur who wrote “Hostile Takeover,” has tapped into Germany’s unease about the refugee influx with a dystopian prediction of what lies ahead.

Describing Islam as “an ideology of violence disguised as religion,” Sarrazin argues that if Europe doesn’t take swift action to halt Muslim migration into the EU, European society will ultimately be enveloped and destroyed by Islam.

“Hostile Takeover” debuted last week at No. 1 on German Amazon’s bestseller list.

Supporters of the Seebruecke (sea bridge) movement pile up life vests during a demonstration in Berlin on September 2, 2018 | Kay Nietfeld/AFP via Getty Images

Germany’s political establishment, meanwhile, has taken to the airwaves, in what might best be described as ritualistic soul-searching.

“For far too long, we didn’t recognize the dimension of the problem or weren’t willing to,” Marco Wanderwitz, a state secretary in the interior ministry, said on public television.

Though Wanderwitz was referring to the outbreak of right-wing violence, many in the country would argue the same is true for the government’s handling of the refugee question.

Tolerance

While Germany remains an extremely safe country by international standards (there were roughly as many homicides in all of Germany last year, 731, as in Chicago), a raft of high-profile, violent crimes committed by refugees is unsettling the nation.

In June, the rape and murder of a 14-year-old girl, allegedly at the hands of an Iraqi asylum seeker, enraged the nation. That case followed the fatal stabbing of a 15-year-old in broad daylight at a drug store in southwestern Germany in December. This time, the suspected killer was an Afghan.

Last year, refugees were suspects in about 15 percent of homicides in Germany, according to official statistics, though they account for only 2 percent of the population.

The issue of refugee crime has been a boon for the AfD.

Many of the suspects, including the Iraqi accused of stabbing the Chemnitz victim and the terrorist who drove into a Berlin Christmas market in 2016, enjoy an immigration status classified as a Duldung, or “tolerance.” That means that even though the individual’s asylum application has been denied, the government is allowing the person to remain in Germany and in many cases seek employment. The reasons for such a ruling vary, but can be as mundane as a lack of a passport, making it difficult to confirm the migrant’s nationality.

About 170,000 migrants enjoy “tolerated” status in Germany. A further 350,000 reside in the country with no official immigration status at all, many of them waiting for a ruling on an asylum application.

Critics say the presence of so many migrants without a bona fide legal right to remain in the country proves that Germany’s asylum system is a sham. History suggests that a denied asylum application presents little more than minor delay to a migrant’s quest to acquire legal immigration status in Germany. About 233,000 people whose asylum applications were rejected are currently in the country. All but 60,000 of them enjoy “tolerated” status.

Angela Merkel’s government has largely avoided addressing such concerns in public, mainly because there are no easy answers.

Under Germany’s federal structure, its 16 regional states are responsible for deporting migrants. Last year, they carried out about 24,000 deportations, far fewer than the potential pool. The problem is that if a migrant doesn’t agree to leave the country, the cost of removing him or her can be prohibitive due to the extra security involved.

Considering the large number of refugees and that most of them are young men, it’s inevitable that some of them will commit crimes.

Yet with the rise of the anti-immigrant AfD, such arguments generally get drowned out.

The issue of refugee crime has been a boon for the AfD. In Saxony, the party is closing in on Merkel’s Christian Democrats ahead of next year’s state election. The AfD’s poll numbers are strong across the rest of the eastern half of the country as well.

Establishment politicians have tried to dismiss that strength as an eastern phenomenon, the result of the region’s failure to face its Nazi past after the war. They point to the long history of violence against migrants in the region, including the torching of a refugee shelter in Rostock in 1992 and the murder spree by the NSU, an underground neo-Nazi group that killed 10 people.

While there’s something to such arguments, the resonance of Sarrazin’s latest book suggests unease over refugees extends far beyond the borders of former East Germany.

Amid the neo-Nazi attacks in Chemnitz, Merkel’s coalition has succeeded in steering the debate away from refugee violence to the dangers of the extreme right. For now. If the last few months are any indication, that tactic won’t work for long.


Read this next: AI can’t fix Facebook

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Raptors Assistant: Kawhi Leonard ‘Doing Great’ in Offseason Workouts

FILE - In this Jan. 13, 2018, file photo, San Antonio Spurs forward Kawhi Leonard (2) moves the ball up court during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Denver Nuggets, in San Antonio. General manager R.C. Buford acknowledges star forward Kawhi Leonard is unhappy with the Spurs. He remains optimistic the relationship can be salvaged. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)

Eric Gay/Associated Press

Kawhi Leonard only played nine games last season due to a quadriceps injury, but the new star for the Toronto Raptors is back to his old self, according to Raptors assistant Phil Handy.

“He’s doing great,” Handy said of Leonard on Toronto Talk Sports (h/t Ashish Mathur of Amico Hoops). “He’s in great shape. His body looks good. He’s feeling good. He’s moving well, so I don’t anticipate any issues or problems.”

After a lost 2017-18 season, Leonard was traded to Toronto in a July deal that sent DeMar DeRozan to the San Antonio Spurs

While there was obvious concern about the player’s health, he passed his physical to make the trade official.

The two-time All-Star also recently worked out at UCLA with LeBron James, Kevin Durant and others, via RealGM:

“The level they worked at was at an all-time high,” Handy said of the Aug. 21 workout. “They just really competed. They pushed each other. They encouraged each other.”

Mathur also reported that the forward has looked “remarkable” in offseason workouts.

When healthy, Leonard has shown he can be an elite player on both ends of the court. He is a two-time Defensive Player of the Year and has twice finished in the top three of MVP voting.

If he is looking as good as observers have indicated, the Raptors have added a legitimate star that could lead them to the NBA Finals.

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What’s in store for Trump’s week

HEADS UP … WE HEAR that congressional leadership is heading to the White House this week for a meeting with PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP about the fall agenda. It’s pretty common for the leadership to touch gloves with the president ahead of a busy legislative period. GOVERNMENT FUNDING runs out in 28 days.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK … THE PRESIDENT’S WEEK … Tuesday: The president will have lunch with VP Mike Pence, and then meet with the United States Travel Association CEOs. Wednesday: The amir of Kuwait will come to the White House. Thursday: Trump will go to Billings, Montana.

WSJ’S REID EPSTEIN: “GOP’s Tough Task in House Races: Reach Beyond Trump’s Base Endangered Republicans must find supporters who will vote for them even though they disapprove of the president”: “The GOP’s endangered incumbents this fall—most of whom represent suburban districts where Mr. Trump has turned off voters—must find supporters who will vote for them even though they disapprove of the president.

“‘If you look at our battlefield, 55 districts, the president is underwater in every one of those 55 districts across America,’ said Ben Ray Luján, the chairman of the [DCCC].

“There is little debate House Democratic candidates are running with the wind at their backs. The president’s party has lost House seats in 18 of the last 20 midterm elections, with an average loss of 29 seats. The last time a president’s approval rating was as low as Mr. Trump’s 40%, Republicans lost 30 seats as George W. Bush’s popularity sagged during the Iraq war in 2006.” WSJ

KEN VOGEL and MATT ROSENBERG on NYT A1 “Agents Tried to Flip Russian Oligarchs. The Fallout Spread to Trump”: “In the estimation of American officials, Oleg V. Deripaska, a Russian oligarch with close ties to the Kremlin, has faced credible accusations of extortion, bribery and even murder. They also thought he might make a good source. Between 2014 and 2016, the F.B.I. and the Justice Department unsuccessfully tried to turn Mr. Deripaska into an informant. They signaled that they might provide help with his trouble in getting visas for the United States or even explore other steps to address his legal problems. In exchange, they were hoping for information on Russian organized crime and, later, on possible Russian aid to President Trump’s 2016 campaign, according to current and former officials and associates of Mr. Deripaska.

“In one dramatic encounter, F.B.I. agents appeared unannounced and uninvited at a home Mr. Deripaska maintains in New York and pressed him on whether Paul Manafort, a former business partner of his who went on to become chairman of Mr. Trump’s campaign, had served as a link between the campaign and the Kremlin. The attempt to flip Mr. Deripaska was part of a broader, clandestine American effort to gauge the possibility of gaining cooperation from roughly a half-dozen of Russia’s richest men, nearly all of whom, like Mr. Deripaska, depend on President Vladimir V. Putin to maintain their wealth, the officials said.” NYT

Good Sunday morning. WHAT’S ON THE PRESIDENT’S MIND … at 9:28 a.m.: “Tiger Woods showed great class in the way he answered the question about the Office of the Presidency and me. Now they say the so-called ‘left’ is angry at him. So sad, but the ‘center & right’ loves Tiger, Kanye, George Foreman, Jim Brown & so many other greats, even more…….”

… at 9:37 a.m.: “….The fact is that African/American unemployment is now the lowest in the history of our country. Same with Asian, Hispanic and almost every other group. The Democrats have been all talk and no action. My Administration has already produced like no other, and everyone sees it!”

THE BIG PICTURE … WAPO’S ROBERT BARNES: “Issues for Brett Kavanaugh: the president who chose him and the Supreme Court he would change”: “Two factors animate U.S. Appeals Court Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh’s crucial Supreme Court confirmation hearings that begin Tuesday in the Senate: one is the justice he would succeed, and the other is the president who chose him.

“A host of issues are at stake with the departure of the court’s pivotal justice, Anthony M. Kennedy, whose swing-vote jurisprudence did not fit neatly into a conservative or liberal box. Abortion, affirmative action, the interplay of religious beliefs and gay rights, and the government’s protection of the environment are among the issues affected by Kennedy’s departure, and Kavanaugh is likely to be to the right of Kennedy on all.

“But this confirmation fight also comes as the powers of a special prosecutor to investigate President Trump are part of a national debate, with important constitutional decisions on executive power and prerogative possibly awaiting the high court.” WaPo

WHAT YOU’LL HEAR A LOT ABOUT FROM DEMOCRATS … NYT’S SHERYL STOLBERG: “White House Cites Executive Privilege to Withhold 100,000 Pages of Kavanaugh Records”: “The Trump White House, citing executive privilege, is withholding from the Senate more than 100,000 pages of records from Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh’s time as a lawyer in the administration of former President George W. Bush.

“The decision, disclosed in a letter that a lawyer for Mr. Bush sent on Friday to Senator Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, comes just days before the start of Judge Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation hearings on Tuesday. It drew condemnation from Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader.” NYT

SUNDAY BEST …

SEN. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.) told CHRIS WALLACE on “FOX NEWS SUNDAY” that if Kavanaugh “does well at the hearing, he will get … 55 [votes] or higher, if he does well.”

— GRAHAM to Wallace, on McCain: GRAHAM: “He tried to drain the swamp before it was cool, that you can fight hard and still be respected. If you forgive, people appreciate it, and if you admit to mistakes, you look good as a stronger man. That’s the formula, John McCain. This was a civics lesson for anybody who wanted to listen. Why do remember this man, because of the way he conducted his public life.”

WALLACE: “Do you think there’s a lesson there for President Trump?” GRAHAM: “There’s a lesson here for everybody, including President Trump. Everybody makes mistakes. Those who admit it are seen by the public as bigger, not smaller. Know what you’re talking about, fight hard, forgive, and have passion, strength and kindness are not mutually exclusive.”

— SEN. AMY KLOBUCHAR (D-MINN.) told CHUCK TODD on NBC’S “MEET THE PRESS” that she would “prefer” to bring back the 60-vote threshold for Supreme Court nominees.

— KLOBUCHAR on campaigning with KEITH ELLISON: TODD: “Are you comfortable campaigning with him? Would you campaign for him?” KLOBUCHAR: “– Right now, I’m focused on Judge Kavanaugh. He hasn’t asked me to campaign with him. I — that is where we are right now. And we have an incredibly strong ticket in Minnesota. We have two senate races up, a governor’s race. Focused on that.” TODD: “So if he asked, would you campaign for him?” KLOBUCHAR: “I will campaign with our ticket when the time comes.”

— JOHN KERRY spoke with MARGARET BRENNAN on CBS’S “FACE THE NATION”: BRENNAN: “Are you going to run in 2020?” KERRY: “I’m really not thinking about it… talking about 2020 right now is a total distraction and waste of time. What we need to do is focus on 2018.”

— ANDREW GILLUM spoke with DANA BASH on CNN’S “STATE OF THE UNION”: BASH: “Final question. Bernie Sanders was one of your big supporters, particularly towards the end of your primary race there. You endorsed Hillary Clinton in 2016. Would you support Bernie Sanders for president in 2020?”

GILLUM: “Oh, Dana, I’m trying to get elected governor. We’re trying to save this state. But I will tell you, I’m deeply appreciative of the support of Sen. Sanders. And you’re right. I did support Secretary Clinton. I spoke to her earlier last week, she and the president, President Clinton. I value their friendships. And I think what is important is that what we showed is that we have got the ability to bring together all the wings of the Democratic Party.”

— SEN. RON JOHNSON (R-WIS.) tells MARTHA RADDATZ on ABC’S “THIS WEEK” how Republicans should run in 2018: RADDATZ: “How do Republican candidates overcome the cloud of investigations that hang over the president, especially in a key swing state like yours?”

JOHNSON: “I think we should point out the reality of all the good things this administration has done. We stopped adding to the regulatory burden, we have a more competitive tax system.”

MORE ON MCCAIN …

— ARIZONA REPUBLIC FRONT PAGE: “NATION’S FAREWELL”

— Pool report: “After the funeral service, over 100 McCain staff and former staff gathered to have some beer and pizza — reliving a constant meal from many campaign nights. McCain’s long time office manager, Virg Pounds, helped organize and sported a ‘Students for McCain’ tee shirt while greeting staffers from the past 30 years. McCain’s long time scheduler, Ellen Cahill, and long time legislative director, Joe Donoghue, helped host and mingled with staff and former staff they had worked with during the past 20+ years of service to Senator McCain. The Senator often said being a McCain staffer is similar to checking into ‘Hotel California,’ you check-in and never really leave. [On Sunday] many of McCain’s long time advance team members from the 2008 campaign will advance one last event for the Senator, his journey to Annapolis.”

— TIM ALBERTA, “Washington Mourns John McCain – And Its Own Demise Under Trump: Saturday’s memorial service celebrated the most sacred of D.C. ideals: the vanishing bipartisan spirit he represented”: “It was a sendoff befitting a titan of the republic: the flag-draped coffin, the bagpipes, the angelic chorus, the stained-glass windows and gothic pillared arches encasing a sanctuary of some 3,000 notables bidding a final farewell. But the Saturday morning service for John McCain at the National Cathedral felt also like a memorial for Washington herself — a capital city that under President Donald Trump no longer seems capable, as the late senator was, of balancing fights with friendships, of divorcing disagreement from disrespect, of recognizing the basic difference between opponents and enemies.

“With organ notes echoing throughout the cavernous complex before the ceremony, they mingled and shook hands and scanned the room for More Important People as they might at any black-tie affair. Former presidents and vice presidents elicited camera clicks. Senators compared notes with ambassadors. Military officials and government wisemen and media personalities craned their necks.

“Jared and Ivanka held court with perfect strangers. The commotion outside — police escorts, a procession of black Cadillacs, hundreds of congressmen and senators being bussed in, all with onlookers lining the surrounding sidewalks — made it a quintessentially D.C. occasion, a marriage of exclusivity and self-importance. The only thing missing from this meeting of official Washington was the chief executive of official Washington.” POLITICO Magazine

— SUSAN GLASSER on NewYorker.com, “John McCain’s Funeral Was the Biggest Resistance Meeting Yet”: “A little after 9 A.M., President Trump’s daughter Ivanka and her husband, Jared Kushner, made an entrance in the packed Cathedral, embracing Republican senators, nodding earnestly, dressed in black like everyone else. Trump’s national-security adviser, John Bolton, was there, too, along with John Kelly, the former Marine general whom Trump has enlisted as his White House chief of staff. All eyes were on them, and, after the service, that is much of what the buzzing knots of people outside the cathedral talked about:

“What were they thinking as they heard the speeches? Why did they come? Were they embarrassed? Ashamed? Should they be? They should not be under any illusions, and I imagine they weren’t: this was a room full of people who hate much of what their boss is doing, and that they are letting him do it. Was a tax cut for the wealthy worth it? A few dozen judicial appointments and two Supreme Court seats?” NewYorker.com

DEEP DIVE – BOSTON GLOBE’S ANNIE LINSKEY: “Ethnicity not a factor in Elizabeth Warren’s rise in law”: “In the most exhaustive review undertaken of Elizabeth Warren’s professional history, the Globe found clear evidence, in documents and interviews, that her claim to Native American ethnicity was never considered by the Harvard Law faculty, which voted resoundingly to hire her, or by those who hired her to four prior positions at other law schools. At every step of her remarkable rise in the legal profession, the people responsible for hiring her saw her as a white woman. …

“Once Warren was working at the law school in a permanent job, her status as Native American wasn’t a secret. Administrators marked her down as a Native American from 1995 to 2004. Her colleagues gave her some guff about it, joking behind her back that her Native American name would have been “Talking Pot,” in homage to her oratorical skills. Harvard Law School also used Warren’s ethnicity internally in December 1995 to bolster the case that they didn’t need to hire more minorities (even though publicly the law school continued to pledge support for diversity). …

“‘This is a made-up issue,’ said Alan Dershowitz, a Harvard Law professor emeritus and occasional Trump defender, when asked if her heritage played a role. ‘This is not an issue that’s worthy of the president or anyone else.’” Globe

FOR YOUR RADAR — “Pentagon cancels aid to Pakistan over record on militants,” by Reuters’ Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali: “The U.S. military said it has made a final decision to cancel $300 million in aid to Pakistan that had been suspended over Islamabad’s perceived failure to take decisive action against militants, in a new blow to deteriorating ties.

“The so-called Coalition Support Funds were part of a broader suspension in aid to Pakistan announced by President Donald Trump at the start of the year, when he accused Pakistan of rewarding past assistance with ‘nothing but lies & deceit.’ The Trump administration says Islamabad is granting safe haven to insurgents who are waging a 17-year-old war in neighboring Afghanistan, a charge Pakistan denies. But U.S. officials had held out the possibility that Pakistan could win back that support if it changed its behavior.” Reuters

— “An Army Director Hired To A Top Immigration Post Spewed Anti-Muslim Comments On Facebook — Then He Lost The Job,” by BuzzFeed’s Hamed Aleaziz, Adolfo Flores and Jane Lytvynenko: “A U.S. Army director recently offered a job as deputy director of the federal agency that oversees immigration applications made anti-Muslim statements and posts on Facebook in recent years.

“Guy Sands-Pingot, who was at one point a brigadier general, was tapped to be deputy director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) and was slated to begin in mid-September. Sands-Pingot would have served under an administration that is seeking to significantly cut back on the number of legal and undocumented immigrants and has, with the travel ban, targeted Muslim-majority countries. He would have also helped oversee an agency that recently created a denaturalization unit. …

“In a comment from about two years ago, Sands-Pingot compared Islam to the Nazi Party. He said Muslim intellectuals and a ‘political axis’ continually exonerate terrorist attacks as solitary acts of violence despite a clear connection. … After BuzzFeed News asked USCIS about some of the material on Facebook, spokesman Michael Bars said Sands-Pingot will no longer fill the role he was recently hired for.” BuzzFeed

BONUS GREAT WEEKEND READS, curated by Daniel Lippman, filing from Jackson Hole, Wyoming:

— “American Pie,” by Jenny G. Zhang in Eater: “How sharing a Hawaiian pizza from Pizza Hut became a Beijing family tradition.” Eater (h/t Longform.org)

— “The Mystery of People Who Speak Dozens of Languages,” by Judith Thurman in the New Yorker: “What can hyperpolyglots teach the rest of us?” New Yorker

— “What Drove Sigmund Freud to Write a Scandalous Biography of Woodrow Wilson?” by Ben Yagoda in Smithsonian Magazine: “The founder of psychoanalysis collaborated with a junior American diplomat to lambaste the former president.” Smithsonian

— “Death, Redesigned,” by Jon Mooallem in California Sunday in April 2015: “A legendary design firm, a corporate executive, and a Buddhist-hospice director take on the end of life.” California Sunday

— “American Beauties,” by Rebecca Altman in Topic: “The first plastic bags were introduced to consumers in the 1950s to collect trash and carry home dry cleaning. By 1988, about 40 percent of U.S. grocery bags were plastic. By 2003 plastic’s market share was close to 80 percent. Somewhere between 500 billion and 1.5 trillion plastic bags are consumed globally each year at a rate of more than a million a minute.” Topic

— “Nuance: A Love Story,” by Meghan Daum in Medium – per ALDaily.com’s description: “As politics has become an exercise in drawing a bright line between those on the right and those in the wrong, Meghan Daum falls back in love with an old flame: nuance.” Medium

— “The New Reading Environment” – n+1: “What must it feel like, we wonder, to carefully slather such oleaginous smarminess over statements that you cannot possibly believe?” n+1

— “Why Does Violence in Chicago Attract So Much Attention, Even Though It’s Not the Murder Capital of The U.S.?” by Breanna Edwards in The Root – per Longreads.com’s description: “Homicide rates in Chicago’s black communities receive a disproportionate amount of media attention in an ongoing tendency to pathologize and sensationalize.” The Root

— “Diary of a Concussion,” by Elizabeth Lopatto in the Verge: “I still felt like myself, but it was kind of like my personality was a set of piano keys and someone had sliced off all the notes you’d ordinarily play with your left hand. I could go on playing with both hands, but only the top half of the keyboard was available. It was apparent, once I was back at work, that my attention span wasn’t what it had been. This is actually common in concussion patients. It’s related to the problems with vision — which makes sense, since attention and vision have a lot to do with each other.” The Verge

— “The New Old Age,” by Sandra Martin in the Walrus – per Longreads.com’s description: “When FDR signed the Social Security Act in the 1930s, the average male life expectancy was 61. Today, it’s nearly 80. Is society ready for more people living longer than ever?” The Walrus

— “How to be human: the man who was raised by wolves,” by Matthew Bremner in the Guardian: “Abandoned as a child, Marcos Rodríguez Pantoja survived alone in the wild for 15 years. But living with people proved to be even more difficult.” Guardian (h/t Longform.org)

— “Programming My Child,” by David Auerbach in an adaptation of “Bitwise: A Life in Code” in Boston Review: “A few years after leaving Google, I had a daughter, and thus began another long-term engineering project. The stimulus-response cycle is out in the open with a child, and the feedback loop created between parent and child is tight, controlled, and frequently comprehensible. In the first months of her life, I kept a spreadsheet of my daughter’s milestones. Hardware upgrades to her height and weight were ongoing, but I declared a new ‘version’ whenever my wife and I deemed her sufficiently different to appear as though a software upgrade had been installed.” Boston Review$18.27 on Amazon

SPOTTED: Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.) chatting with Bill Richardson while waiting yesterday for their JetBlue flight from DCA to Boston.

WEEKEND WEDDINGS – “Brittany Brady, Jeffrey Parrillo” – N.Y. Times: “Mrs. Parrillo, 28, is a field producer for CNN’s program development team in New York. She interviews guests around the world for documentary series produced by the Atlanta-based cable news network. She graduated from the University of Richmond. … Mr. Parrillo, 37, is a residential real estate salesman at New York City Property and Residence Management in New York. He is also an actor … He graduated from Georgetown and received a Master of Fine Arts from the Actors Studio in New York.” With a pic

— OBAMA ALUMNI: “Amy Gershkoff, Brendan Bolles” – N.Y. Times: “Mrs. Bolles, who is 38 and works in San Francisco, consults for and advises companies in the technology sector regarding data and technology solutions. She previously served as the head of media planning for President Barack Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign. She graduated summa cum laude from Cornell, and received both a master’s degree and a Ph.D. in political science from Princeton. … Mr. Bolles, 43, is the senior technical director for Swordfish, a creative advertising studio in San Francisco. Previously, he served as a visual effects artist for movies including ‘Sin City’ and ‘Hellboy.’” With a pic

BIRTHDAYS: Lisa Barclay, partner at Boies, Schiller & Flexner and former FDA chief of staff (hat tip: Autumn VandeHei) … Emily Porter … James Rosen, celebrating with Sara on a trip to Savannah next month … Curtis Jablonka … former Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) is 67 … former Sen. Alan K. Simpson (R-Wyo.) is 87 … Rep. John Rutherford (R-Fla.) is 66 … NPR’s Don Gonyea (h/t Dick Keil) … Yahoo News’ Dan Klaidman is 54 … J.P. Freire, comms director for Joint Economic Committee … Taylor Hennings, Tim Kaine’s Virginia finance director (h/t Ian Sams) … Jordan Blum … Joe Shonkwiler … Seth Zweifler … Jess Fassler … Zakiya Thomas … Coleman Hutchins … Molly McUsic, president of the Wyss Foundation … Fleishman alum Kris Balderston (h/t Patrick Steel) … Evan Rosenfeld … Evan Viau, legislative clerk for House Energy and Commerce’s Communications and Technology Subcommittee (h/t Kelly Collins) …

… Tom Manatos, VP of government relations at Spotify and founder of D.C. political job site TomManatosJobs.com … Elizabeth Birch (h/ts Jon Haber) … Bryan Watt … Laurie McCord … Margot Edelman … Netflix’s Ferial Govashiri … Ethan Zorfas, VP at Axiom Strategies … Dylan Vorbach … comms firm Ditto is 6 … Shannon Wheeler … Melissa Joseph … Christa Robinson of Kentucky … Andrew Shine … Scott Petersen, deputy COS for Rep. Jim Costa … Kim Bowman … Bill Bode … former Rep. Earl Pomeroy (D-N.D.) is 64 … Wayne Washington … Jennifer Hanley, managing director at Tusk Ventures … Ian Kremer … Jordan Blum … Michael Siroka … Xuan Thai … Andy Adkins … Raney Aronson-Rath, executive producer at Frontline … Kai Bird … Sakib Shaikh … Amy Goldman … Trevor Thomas … Vi Neil … Connie Cook … Michael Kolenc (h/ts Teresa Vilmain)

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Robert Griffin III Reportedly to Be Ravens’ Backup QB Ahead of Lamar Jackson

MIAMI, FL - AUGUST 25: Lamar Jackson #8 and Robert Griffin III #3 of the Baltimore Ravens warm up in front of head coach John Harbaugh of the Baltimore Ravens before a preseason game against the Miami Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium on August 25, 2018 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Mark Brown/Getty Images)

Mark Brown/Getty Images

The Baltimore Ravens will head into the 2018 season with Robert Griffin III as the backup quarterback behind Joe Flacco, NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reported Sunday.

Lamar Jackson, whom the Ravens traded up to select with the 32nd pick of the 2018 draft, will be the third quarterback on the depth chart.

Griffin enjoyed a more efficient preseason compared to Jackson. He finished 27-of-41 for 243 yards, two touchdowns and an interception, while Jackson was 34-of-68 for 408 yards, three touchdowns and an interception.

Earlier in the preseason, Ravens head coach John Harbaugh spoke highly of Griffin’s contributions and value to the team.

There’s no question that the best quarterback thing to do would be to keep Robert Griffin,” Harbaugh said a day before Baltimore’s 27-10 victory over the Miami Dolphins on Aug. 25, per ESPN.com’s Jamison Hensley. “He’s proven it. He’s played exceptionally well, and it makes the team better.”

To some extent, there’s little distinction between second and third in the Ravens’ QB depth chart. Flacco has only missed six starts since joining the team in 2008, and all of those absences were the result of a torn ACL in 2015.

Flacco is Baltimore’s unquestioned starter in 2018, so Jackson’s playing time—barring an injury to Flacco—is basically going to be the same whether he’s ahead of or below Griffin.

If Harbaugh had to replace an injured Flacco, then going with the more experienced Griffin makes sense for a team with playoff aspirations. Jackson’s preseason numbers highlight how he’s likely going to need a year or two to get his feet wet in the NFL before he’s ready to be Flacco’s long-term successor.

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Do reports on atrocities serve any purpose?

Fifty-one people, including 40 children, were killed when the bus was struck on August 9 in Sadaa province.

The Saudi-UAE-led coalition now says the attack was “unjusitified” and is promising to hold those responsible to account.

But who has the power to hand out punishments for such atrocities in Yemen and elsewhere?

Human Rights Watch called the air raid on the bus an “apparent war crime” and is calling for an end to all weapons sales to Saudi Arabia.

The UN has published several significant reports on conflicts around the world. It’s recommended top military figures in Myanmar to face genocide charges over their campaign against the Rohingya in Rakhine state.

The Assad government has been accused of using chemical weapons on a number of occasions during the Syrian war, and South Sudanese government forces have been accused of potential war crimes for a campaign of rape and killing that targeted civilians in opposition-held villages.

And in one of the UN’s most controversial reports, Judge Richard Goldstone accused both Israel and Hamas of war crimes in Gaza in 2008.

Presenter: Hoda Abdel-Hamid

Guests:

Bill Van Esveld – senior researcher for the children’s rights division at Human Rights Watch

Baraa Shiban – Middle East and North Africa caseworker at Reprieve

Afrah Nasser – senior non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council

Source: Al Jazeera News

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Report: Nick Saban Apologized to Maria Taylor for Rant After Question on QBs

Alabama head coach Nick Saban speaks to media before a NCAA college football practice, Saturday, Aug. 4, 2018, in Tuscaloosa, Ala. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)

Butch Dill/Associated Press

Alabama Crimson Tide head coach Nick Saban apologized to ESPN sideline reporter Maria Taylor for his curt response to a question about quarterbacks Tua Tagovailoa and Jalen Hurts following Saturday’s 51-14 win over the Louisville Cardinals.

James Andrew Miller, who co-authored a book about the history of ESPN, reported Sunday that Saban reached out to Taylor by phone to address the situation.

SportsCenter shared the postgame exchange between the two:

SportsCenter @SportsCenter

Nick Saban responded critically to a question about his QBs after Alabama’s win. https://t.co/sZCvIox2Dq

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

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