Steve Kerr Calls Warriors’ Recent Slide ‘The Real NBA’ After Being in a ‘Dream’

Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr looks on as the Warriors play the Dallas Mavericks during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Saturday, Nov. 17, 2018, in Dallas. The Mavericks won 112-109. (AP Photo/Ron Jenkins)

Ron Jenkins/Associated Press

The rest of the NBA is not about to feel sorry for the Golden State Warriors, but head coach Steve Kerr acknowledged things haven’t been as much of a “dream” lately.

“This is the real NBA,” he said following Sunday’s 104-92 loss to the San Antonio Spurs, per Nick Friedell of ESPN.com. “We haven’t been in the real NBA the last few years. We’ve been in this dream. And so now we’re faced real adversity and we got to get out of it ourselves.”

Golden State has lost three in a row and is 2-5 in its last seven after a blistering 10-1 start. Kerr went on to say this is the most difficult regular-season stretch since he became the head coach prior to the 2014-15 campaign.

Friedell noted this is also the first time the two-time defending champions went 0-3 on a road trip under Kerr’s guidance.

While Golden State is playing without an injured Stephen Curry and Draymond Green, it was the drama-related headlines involving the latter that generated the most news during this slump. He was suspended for Tuesday’s win over the Atlanta Hawks after a back-and-forth with Kevin Durant stemming from the end of Monday’s game against the Los Angeles Clippers.

Chris Haynes of Yahoo Sports reported Green called the reigning two-time NBA Finals MVP a “b—h” multiple times and said of Durant’s potential free agency this upcoming summer: “We don’t need you. We won without you. Leave.”

Drama and losses have suddenly become the new norm for the Warriors, but they have four straight home games on the schedule to get back on track. They are 8-1 on the season at Oracle Arena.

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Apple’s Tim Cook warns regulation is coming for the tech industry

Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, believes regulation of the tech industry is inevitable.
Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, believes regulation of the tech industry is inevitable.

Image: Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

2016%2f09%2f16%2fe7%2fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lzex.0f9e7By Johnny Lieu

This year has been horrendous for Silicon Valley’s public image.

With a litany of issues like data misuse and political interference laid bare within the last 12 months, Apple CEO Tim Cook told Axios on HBO that government regulation of the tech industry is “inevitable.”

SEE ALSO: Facebook’s former security chief stands up for the social network, calls for change

“Generally speaking, I am not a big fan of regulation,” he said in an interview from Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino.

“I’m a big believer in the free market. But we have to admit when the free market is not working. And it hasn’t worked here. I think it’s inevitable that there will be some level of regulation … I think the Congress and the administration at some point will pass something.” 

Cook made the comment after saying that technology creators didn’t set out to do evil, but rather they didn’t anticipate the “negative things it could be used for.”

It’s the latest instance of Cook’s thinly-veiled criticism of Facebook. Without naming names, last month Cook lambasted companies who collect your private data, and put “profits over privacy.” 

He called for a federal privacy law, where a person has the right to have personal data minimized, the right to know what user data is being collected and why, the right for users to access their data, and the right to security. 

Apple has taken a staunch view on privacy in the past, going toe-to-toe with government agencies, as exemplified in its famous battle with the FBI and its blocking of hacking tools used by law enforcement to break into iPhones.

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Mitchell Trubisky, Bears Boost NFC North Lead with Win vs. Kirk Cousins, Vikings

Chicago Bears free safety Eddie Jackson (39) celebrates with his teammates after intercepting and running for a touchdown during the second half of an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings Sunday, Nov. 18, 2018, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press

The red-hot Chicago Bears seized control of the NFC North on Sunday with a 25-20 victory over the Minnesota Vikings at Soldier Field.

Chicago won its fourth game in a row and improved to 7-3, while Minnesota dropped to 5-4-1 and further behind in the divisional race. Mitchell Trubisky finished 20-of-31 for 165 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions, while Jordan Howard added 63 rushing yards.

Kirk Cousins countered at 30-of-46 for 262 yards, two touchdowns and two interceptions and wasn’t able to provide enough firepower on the road against a stout Bears defense.

Khalil Mack, Not Kirk Cousins, Steals the Prime-Time Spotlight

Cousins had quite the message for his teammates before the game:

ProFootballTalk @ProFootballTalk

Vikings QB Kirk Cousins to his teammates just now on NBC: “They’re not the reason this game moved to prime time. We are.”

Unfortunately for the Vikings, his message didn’t resonate. Khalil Mack, and not the quarterback or his teammates, was the prime-time attraction.

Minnesota tried to block the three-time Pro Bowler with just Riley Reiff early in the game to no avail. Mack consistently blew past him, got his hands on passes, flushed Cousins from the pocket and forced him to rush his throws. What’s more, he stripped Dalvin Cook and recovered the fumble to stop a drive after the Vikings moved into the red zone. 

NFL @NFL

MACK ATTACK.

@52Mack_ forces the fumble and #DaBears recover! #MINvsCHI

📺: NBC https://t.co/C8mL0eCR5T

NFL @NFL

MACK. ATTACK. @52Mack_ #DaBears

📺: #MINvsCHI on NBC https://t.co/vzsHWxcxEQ

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

Khalil Mack really threw him down with one arm 😳

(via @thecheckdown)
https://t.co/r0kmTycIvU

That forced the Vikings to double-team him and leave a running back to provide support on multiple passes, which opened up rushing lanes for other members of the defensive front. As a result, Akiem Hicks stuffed a number of runs, notched a monster sack and knocked down a two-point conversion in an impressive performance.

Leonard Floyd also forced Cousins to airmail a throw—which Adrian Amos intercepted—before halftime.

As if that wasn’t enough, a rattled Cousins threw a pick-six to Eddie Jackson in the fourth quarter on the biggest play of the game after the Vikings had pulled within eight.

Chicago Bears @ChicagoBears

So many feelings… so so many.

#MINvsCHI | #DaBears https://t.co/shShkeCSci

The turnovers surely took points off the board and underscored Mack’s ability to impact the game beyond his own stats (one sacks, two tackles, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery).

Whether it was the running back staying in to protect instead of serving as a safety valve or linemen left on an island while two or three blockers were on Mack, he wrecked the Vikings’ game plan multiple times.

That is what prime-time players do.

Trubisky’s Legs Are the Secret to Bears’ Success

The Bears tied the long-term future of the franchise to Trubisky’s development when they selected him with the No. 2 pick of the 2017 draft, but their immediate future looks bright because of his running ability.

He wasted little time impacting the game with his legs with three runs during Chicago’s first-half touchdown drive. He then rolled out of the pocket and found Anthony Miller in the corner of the end zone before hitting Josh Bellamy for the ensuing two-point conversion on a similar play.

Trubisky entered Sunday’s contest with 320 yards and three touchdowns on the ground, and he passed Cam Newton for the most quarterback rushing yards on the season with 43 more.

The yardage told only half the story, as his running helped him avoid sacks and keep plays alive for receivers downfield. His successful read-option keeper early in the game also had a ripple effect because it created a slight pause at the second level of Minnesota’s defense.

Chicago Bears @ChicagoBears

Someone’s got happy feet tonight…

#10 picks up 13 more on the ground. https://t.co/2ZLypjSoxf

Yahoo Fantasy Sports @YahooFantasy

Mitchell Trubisky’s mindset when he’s running… https://t.co/yLC1w0IpG4

Say Bruh Metrics @Jason1Goff

#10 https://t.co/sAdx1QeHCz

Ross Tucker @RossTuckerNFL

Best part of Trubisky running is he knows when to get down and doesn’t take big shots.

It’s a little thing but a very important one.

Even a split-second hesitation from the linebackers causes problems with the speed of Tarik Cohen and the power of Howard, as they can punish defenders leaning in the wrong direction multiple ways.

Trubisky also forced defenders a bit closer to the line of scrimmage at times, which opened up passing lanes for the plethora of weapons on the outside in Allen Robinson II, Taylor Gabriel, Miller and Trey Burton.

Chicago still faces the Los Angeles Rams, Vikings and Green Bay Packers in its final six games, which are the types of contests contenders make statements in as the playoffs approach. Every team on the Bears’ schedule will have to account for the quarterback’s running and take away defensive manpower from other areas of the field, which can open up big plays elsewhere.

That will set the Bears up for success against the NFC’s best teams.

Vikings’ Season Hinges on Resurrecting Dalvin Cook, Rushing Attack

Chicago’s defense deserves plenty of credit for stuffing the Vikings in the game’s most critical moments, but 14 rushes for 22 yards as a team is not a sustainable formula when the weather gets colder and the playoffs are looming.

Cook (nine rushes for 12 yards) and Latavius Murray (four rushes for five yards) disappeared, which forced Cousins to throw 46 times in comeback mode against a daunting defensive line. Not only was he constantly hit, but he also threw two back-breaking interceptions that drastically swung momentum.

While the Bears created some breathing room in the division, Minnesota also has to worry about the wild-card race. The 6-4 Carolina Panthers, 5-5 Dallas Cowboys, 5-5 Seattle Seahawks and 4-5-1 Packers are all in the crowded picture for the two spots, putting additional emphasis on every outing.

The schedule doesn’t get any easier either with matchups against the Packers, New England Patriots and Seahawks in the next three plus a rematch against this Chicago defense in Week 17.

Minnesota must find the rushing attack to keep Aaron Rodgers, Tom Brady and Russell Wilson on the sideline and protect Cousins. If it doesn’t, it will be watching the playoffs from home after reaching last season’s NFC Championship Game.

What’s Next? 

Both teams face NFC North foes in Week 12 with the Bears at the Detroit Lions on Thanksgiving and the Vikings hosting the Packers next Sunday.

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Yemen’s Houthis say they are ready for a ceasefire

Yemen’s Houthi rebels say they will halt drone and missile attacks on Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and their Yemeni allies.

The group said in a statement on Sunday it was ready for a broader ceasefire if “the Saudi-led coalition wants peace”.

International pressure has mounted on Yemen’s warring parties to end the war that has killed more than 10,000 people and pushed the country to the verge of starvation.

The move from the Houthis came after the Saudi-led coalition ordered a halt in its offensive against Yemen’s main port city Hodeidah, which has become the focus of the war.

“After our contacts with the UN envoy and his request to stop drone and missile strikes … we announce our initiative … to halt missile and drone strikes on the countries of aggression,” Mohammed Ali al-Houthi, the head of the group’s Supreme Revolutionary Committee, said in a statement.

‘Show good faith’

UN special envoy Martin Griffiths is trying to salvage peace talks after a round in September collapsed when the Houthis did not show up. He hopes to convene talks before the end of the year in Sweden to agree on a framework for peace under a transitional government.

Yemen peace talks: Both sides to attend discussions

Yemen’s parties have given “firm assurances” they are committed to attending peace talks to be convened shortly, Griffiths told the UN Security Council on Friday, and pledged to escort the Houthi delegation from the capital Sanaa if needed.

The group – which has been battling the Saudi-backed government for nearly four years – added it was ready for a broader ceasefire if “the Saudi-led coalition wants peace”.

“[The decision] came to support the UN envoy, to show good faith and support the peace efforts,” the statement said.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE both have said they support UN-led peace talks.

Deadly air strikes

The Houthis say their missile attacks on Saudi Arabia are in retaliation for air raids on Yemen by the Western-backed coalition, which entered Yemen’s war in 2015 to try to restore the Saudi-backed government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi.

The coalition has carried out thousands of air strikes in the impoverished country that have hit schools, markets and hospitals, killing hundreds of people – though it says it does not target civilians.

The Houthis last July unilaterally halted attacks in the Red Sea to support peace efforts, after Saudi Arabia suspended temporarily oil exports through a strategic Red Sea channel following attacks on crude tankers.

Key Western allies including the United States have called for a ceasefire ahead of the renewed UN efforts.

Western countries have provided arms and intelligence to the Arab states in the alliance, but have shown increasing reservations about the conflict since the murder of US-based Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul early last month.

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Full Video Highlights of Lakers’ LeBron James Torching Ex-Team the Heat for 51

  1. D-Rose Turned Back the Clock and Put Up 50

  2. Dubs Trolled Fergie So Hard It Became a Challenge

  3. CP3-Rondo Blowup Was a Long Time Coming

  4. NBA Let Players Know They Have to Cover Branded Tattoos

  5. The NBA Is Back and the Soccer World Is Pumped

  6. Boban Is Back to Break It Down for Another Season

  7. Players Battle Campers in Rivalry of the Summer

  8. Happy 30th to KD!

  9. Andrew Bynum Is Making an NBA Comeback

  10. Kobe’s Hottest Kicks 👟

  11. The Kyrie-I.T. Trade Shook the NBA 1 Year Ago Today

  12. Dyckman Courts Are the Red Carpet of Streetball

  13. Giannis’ Youngest Brother Could Be the True ‘Greek Freak’

  14. #JamesGang Got AAU Hoops on Lock 🔒

  15. 11 Years Ago, KG Joined the Celtics

  16. LeBron’s School Opens in Akron 💪

  17. Embiid Putting the World on a Poster This Offseason

  18. Kobe’s ‘Mamba Mentality’ Runs in the Family

  19. Artist Paints Over LeBron’s ‘King of LA’ Mural

Right Arrow Icon

LeBron James put on a show Sunday night, scoring 51 points while helping the Los Angeles Lakers to a 113-97 win over the Miami Heat.

The 33-year-old finished 19-of-31 from the field, including 6-of-8 from three-point range. He also added eight rebounds, three assists and two steals.

While James scored 44 points just two games ago, it was the first time he hit 50 in a regular-season game since last November. According to SportsCenter, he became just the third player to eclipse 45 in his 16th season or later, joining former Lakers Kobe Bryant and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

After a slow start to the season, Los Angeles is now 9-7 thanks to seven wins in its last nine games.

James is averaging 28.8 points per game after the latest explosion, which would be his highest output since 2009-10 if he can keep it going.   

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Cambodia’s beleaguered opposition and the fight for democracy

Phnom Penh, Cambodia – In June 2017, Cambodia’s pro-democracy opposition party made unprecedented gains in the local commune elections, casting serious doubt on Prime Minister Hun Sen’s ability to extend his 33-year rule in the following year’s national election.

There was a spirit of optimism when Kem Sokha’s Cambodia National Rescue Party prepared to take on Hun Sen at the ballot box. Decades of political violence seemed to be at an end and democracy, first attempted in 1993, was within Cambodia’s grasp.

On November 16, 2017, however, the CNRP was forcibly dissolved on spurious allegations of attempted revolution, leaving politicians, analysts, and journalists across the world no choice but to declare Cambodia’s democracy officially dead.

Today, the country is effectively a one-party dictatorship with the opposition party scattered across the world, only spoken about in whispers in Cambodia.

Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party occupies all 125 seats in the National Assembly. Kem Sokha is under house arrest for unfounded charges of treason. Other CNRP leaders such as co-founder Sam Rainsy and Sokha’s daughter, Kem Monovithya, live abroad to avoid a similar fate. Their supporters live in a state of constant fear.

The transition to full-blown authoritarianism was strongly condemned abroad, with the US and European Union threatening to impose sanctions if democracy is not restored. The EU is considering revoking a preferential trade deal with Cambodia, a move that would cost the economy hundreds of millions of dollars. At the top of the West’s list of demands: the unconditional release of Kem Sokha and the reinstatement of the CNRP.

No future

Lee Morgenbesser, an expert on authoritarian regimes, said the CNRP has no future under Hun Sen, who has repeatedly declared the party cannot be resurrected.

“For a brief moment, the CNRP showed ordinary citizens that there was a political party fighting for the emergence of democracy in Cambodia,” he said in a recent email.

In a forthcoming paper titled Cambodia’s Transition to Hegemonic Authoritarianism, Morgenbesser explains how the recent crackdown was unprecedented and fundamentally changed the nature of Cambodia’s political landscape.

New constitutional amendments declare that political parties “must place the country and nation’s interests first”, a vague requirement that would give the Cambodian government broad authority to accuse opposition parties of being unconstitutional. Other amendments gave the politically biased Supreme Court the authority to dissolve any political party.

Not only were these laws used to destroy the CNRP, but they also ensure that nothing like the CNRP can ever challenge Hun Sen again.

“A few civil society groups and autonomous media organisations might be allowed to operate, and a few political opponents might be allowed to participate, but none will be permitted to threaten the CPP’s newfound hegemony,” Morgenbesser wrote in the article.

‘Cautiously hopeful’

The CNRP was originally formed by the merging of two distinct opposition parties led by Rainsy and Sokha, respectively. After Sokha’s arrest, the party quickly splintered along these old alliances. The deputy leaders did not appear to have a contingency plan, and there were frequent spats between Rainsy supporters and Sokha supporters.

Just this month, tensions flared again when Rainsy offered to make a wager with Hun Sen on when Sokha would be released. Sokha’s camp blasted the stunt, calling it “immoral” and “indecent”.

In spite of this, the CNRP’s exiled leaders on both sides still believe the fractured party can return.

“I am cautiously hopeful that we will regain our space in the country in the near future,” said Sokha’s daughter Monovithya, who has been campaigning for international action against Hun Sen’s regime since her father’s arrest.

Cambodian opposition leader under house arrest after jailing

Meanwhile, Rainsy said the party’s dissolution “vindicated” the CNRP, proving it is the legitimate representative of the people.

“Hun Sen had actually no choice but to dissolve the CNRP in order to remain in power because he knew he would lose any real election,” Rainsy claimed.

While it might be a stretch to say CNRP definitively would have won a fair election, it was clearly a risk Hun Sen wasn’t willing to take.

“Hun Sen could dissolve the CNRP on paper but not in the hearts and minds of the people,” Rainsy said.

It’s true that more than three million supporters didn’t simply disappear, but so far they haven’t been a significant presence during the crackdown. Nobody protested when the CNRP was dissolved and only a handful gathered when Sokha was brought to court in Phnom Penh.

Heng Ratha, a former member of the CNRP’s provincial working group in Siem Reap, said he wishes the party’s leadership had remained in Cambodia to lead resistance efforts.

“For my own opinion I don’t think it was so necessary for the CNRP leaders to leave the country like [vice-president Mu] Sochua and Rainsy. They should return to Cambodia to confront and find a solution with [CNRP] members and supporters,” he said.

International pressure

While Rainsy has correctly pointed out that returning carries the risk of arrest or even assassination, doing so would force Hun Sen to make a difficult decision, something he has not yet had to do. If Rainsy returned, Hun Sen would have two choices. Either arrest another high profile, popular politician, inviting unrest and increased international pressure, or allow him to assume a leadership position in any resistance movement. For Hun Sen, forcing influential dissidents abroad is the best-case scenario.

To their credit, the leaders in exile have had significant success in appealing to the international community for pressure and sanctions.

Other CNRP activists, like the outspoken Kong Mas in Svay Rieng, say they support the decisions the party leaders have made and believe they did everything they could. While the CNRP could have been more prepared or made better decisions during the crisis, judging them too harshly would be akin to victim blaming – they were put in a position they never should have had to deal with in the first place.

“There were many dialogues between the CNRP and the ruling party, but Hun Sen always violated the agreements,” Mas said.

Mas sees the revocation of the EU trade deal as the best chance for change, predicting that almost a million garment workers will lose their jobs.

“That circumstance will make a lot of people angry and people will gather and protest against the government to solve the problem,” he said.

Others are not so optimistic. Than Sorith in Kampong Cham agrees the CNRP leadership acted appropriately, but doesn’t see a future for the party.

“I don’t think the CNRP can return to political activity,” he said, adding he doesn’t believe people will protest even if the trade deal is canceled.

While it’s unlikely the CNRP will return, Morgenbesser does see change on the horizon, noting that demographic trends do not favour the ruling party.

Citing “deep grievances concerning corruption, inequality, land grabbing, and development”, Morgenbesser warns that Hun Sen has added another problem to his list: “undermining expectations for democracy among Cambodian youth”.

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‘Shrek Retold’ is a bizarre fan-made remake of the classic animated film

By Johnny Lieu

Nearly 20 years on and several disappointing sequels later, Shrek is still on our minds.

As it has been for over 200 people, who have contributed to a huge and very weird project called Shrek Retold, a scene-by-scene remake of the 1999 film.

Behind it all is 3GI, the team responsible for the annual festival dedicated to the cantankerous ogre, Shrekfest. A mix of animation, bizarre 3D renderings, and live action scenes, the film’s trailer really speaks for itself.

Shrek Retold is set to be released on 3GI’s YouTube channel on Nov. 29.

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Former Facebook exec defends the social network, calls for change

Former Facebook CSO Alex Stamos responds to the New York Times' report on Facebook.
Former Facebook CSO Alex Stamos responds to the New York Times’ report on Facebook.

Image: Sportsfile/Corbis via Getty Images

2018%2f06%2f26%2fc2%2f20182f062f252f5a2fphoto.d9abc.b1c04By Matt Binder

Facebook’s former chief security officer is defending the social network amid the fallout from the New York Times’ bombshell report on the company this past week.

Alex Stamos, who was the company’s CSO from 2015 up until the summer of 2018, wrote a piece published in the Washington Post on Saturday responding to the New York Times report. Stamos attempted to dispel the Times’ report claiming that Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg, fearing blowback, delayed taking action following his team’s discovery of Russian interference in the 2016 election via a misinformation campaign on the platform.

I wrote some thoughts on the big NYT article on Facebook. I hope we can get some momentum on fixing these issues while we continue to dole out blame for 2016.

But I wanted to say something about the second-level commentary about Sheryl that makes me uncomfortable. https://t.co/gjFdf3ZSh5

— Alex Stamos (@alexstamos) November 17, 2018

Stamos confirmed in the Post that Sandberg, Facebook’s COO, did indeed yell at him the day after he debriefed Facebook’s Board of Directors about the company’s investigation into Russian influence. Stamos claimed that Sandberg “felt blindsided” by his account.

However, the former exec was adamant that neither Sandberg nor anyone at Facebook told him not to investigate Russian influence or obfuscate his findings. Although, Stamos did admit the company should have taken action sooner and been more transparent in disclosing what was uncovered.

“At the time, technology companies were so enamored with the utility of our own products and so focused on sophisticated attacks from U.S. adversaries such as Russia and China that we overlooked less advanced but still effective propaganda operations,” he wrote. 

“To be clear, no one at the company ever told me not to examine Russian activity, nor did anyone attempt to lie about our findings, but Facebook should have responded to these threats much earlier and handled disclosure in a more transparent manner.”

The piece, titled “Yes, Facebook made mistakes in 2016. But we weren’t the only ones,” still attempted to deflect from Facebook’s specific role in the spread of the 2016 Russian influence campaigns and shift focus toward the government and the media’s failures on the issue as well.

“Facebook’s shortcomings do not stand alone. The massive U.S. intelligence community failed to provide actionable intelligence on Russia’s information-warfare goals and capabilities before the election and offered a dearth of assistance afterward. Technology companies can build tools and teams to look inward on their products, but they will never have true geostrategic insight or ability to penetrate hostile countries,” Stamos wrote. 

He then went on to talk about how the relationship between government and tech has been better in 2018, and credited intelligence professionals for the improvement. Stamos also knocked lawmakers for what he called “public grandstanding at investigative hearings” and took aim at the mainstream media for publishing stolen emails and documents from the DNC and Hillary Clinton campaign. He claims the choice to publish this material “rewarded the hackers of the Russian Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU).”

“The sad truth is that blocking Russian propaganda would have required Facebook to ban stories from the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and cable news — not to mention this very paper,” Stamos noted. 

Even if media hasn’t ever grappled with its role in the 2016 election, as Stamos suggested, it has nothing to do with the allegations leveled at Facebook. By the time the hacked emails were released, they were newsworthy and certainly fair game for coverage. 

SEE ALSO: Mark Zuckerberg ordered staff to use Android phones after Apple CEO criticized company, report claims

Stamos stated that all parties involved need to come together to avoid a 2016 foreign interference repeat in 2020, and had some suggestions for how that could happen. He’d like to see a political advertising standard set by Congress, with additional input and support from companies like Facebook, Twitter, and Google. He also wants clarity on the responsibilities of government and large tech industries and the cooperation between the two.

As for the media, Stamos would like to see news outlets publish clear standards as it relates to reporting on newsworthy data leaks.

Lastly, Stamos wrote that it’s up to the people of the U.S. to adapt to a media environment “in which several dozen gatekeepers no longer control what is newsworthy.” While definitely a valid point, the sheer amount of suspiciously sourced news spread over an increasing number of platforms will certainly make that difficult.

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Steelers Come Back Against Jaguars

  1. Come Alive in the Night Time

    Billy Clifford @Spacemannbilly

    Big Ben in the 4th https://t.co/FnLbsHk4yD

  2. ☝

    Pittsburgh Steelers @steelers

    Ben is mood. https://t.co/wESFIqyeo0

  3. Next.

    Jill Black @jillionare_

    Big Ben after his even bigger win today. #HereWeGo https://t.co/T0s3CIZfhs

  4. LFGGGG

    mark @MarcusWinters

    Big. Ben. https://t.co/AhTjXwcigS

  5. Age Ain’t Nothin’ but a Number 😂

    hayden edwards @haydenedwards9

    When Big Ben ran for the game winning touchdown https://t.co/wTRiJVxkOn

  6. Accurate 😅

    Golic and Wingo @GolicAndWingo

    Replay of Big Ben’s TD run… https://t.co/Yo0a0jqS3R

  7. Just Decent, Huh?

    Coach Red Beaulieu @SPB28

    8/15/18: “Big Ben [Roethlisberger], I think he’s decent at best…”

    11/18/18: https://t.co/QRxkP4oAIG

  8. Same

    Pittsburgh Steelers @steelers

    https://t.co/OOySuSqeTO

  9. Legend

    Donnie Druin @DonnieDruin

    Big Ben gets the last laugh https://t.co/jT5Flp9NIQ

  10. Sad Boyz

    New England Patriots Football @TurbanedPatriot

    Big Ben Runs It in For A TOUCHDOWN! Cue The Jalen Ramsey Tears! https://t.co/UvTM4pLkbg

  11. That Would Be a Yes

    Adam Janczyk @adamJ_czyk

    @jalenramsey Did Big Ben Rothlisberger disappoint you today? 🐸

  12. Don’t Sleep on Ben

    Oscar @POSOzzy

    Big Ben and things he did: THAT https://t.co/lWYWbiu2Hc

  13. That’s My QB

    Jeremy Picado León 🇨🇷 @Jeremy_CR

    Big win of my #Steelers, tough game against a good D. Despiste the adversitiy, Ben never gave up and lead the team all the way to the W! #HereWeGo https://t.co/rMr9whfS3A

  14. Huge for the Brand

    Steelers Wire @TheSteelersWire

    BIG BEN. WHAT A COMEBACK. YES

  15. Good Take

    Tyler citeroni @TylerTylercit

    @steelers Big Ben my fuckin hero!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  16. 🐐🐐🐐

    Skip @steelersfan7979

    Big Ben @Tobinator44 @steelers https://t.co/CE8bJaCfJv

  17. and Now It’s Over 🙃

    Steelers Depot @Steelersdepot

    It’s never over until it’s over. #Steelers

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Donald Trump dropped a big ‘Schitt’ after mocking a US hero’s service

The name is Schiff. SCHIFF. With two Fs.
The name is Schiff. SCHIFF. With two Fs.

Image: Chelsea Lauren/Variety/REX/Shutterstock

2016%2f09%2f16%2f63%2fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza2.c97cfBy Adam Rosenberg

It’s the afternoon of a day ending with “y,” so you know Donald Trump has offended someone already.

Look no further than Trump’s Fox News interview with Chris Wallace. A clip from that interview went viral earlier on Sunday when Wallace asked the president to respond to comments by Bill McRaven, the former Navy SEAL who oversaw the operation the ended in the death of Osama Bin Laden.

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McRaven had previously criticized Trump’s frequent attacks against the media — specifically, his characterization of the press as “the enemy of the people” — as “the greatest threat to democracy” he’s ever witnessed. The former SEAL spoke up again in August after Trump’s apparently punitive revocation of former CIA director John Brennan’s security clearance.

Before Wallace could even get his McRaven question out — he only got as far as detailing the man’s record of service — Trump interrupted: “Hillary Clinton fan.”

Wallace tried to continue, but Trump interrupted him again, an angry edge in his voice: “Excuse me. Hillary Clinton fan.”

Wallace continued again and finished his question. Trump responded, first by describing McRaven as a “backer” of Clinton and Barack Obama and then by hinting that McRaven is incompetent, saying “wouldn’t it have been nice if we got Osama Bin Laden a lot sooner than that?”

(It went even further than that. And this was after he boasted about how much he’s supposedly done for the military.)

Trump on retired Navy SEAL Adm. Bill McRaven, who has called the president’s attacks on the press “the greatest threat to democracy.”

“He’s a Hillary Clinton backer and an Obama backer. And frankly, wouldn’t it have been nice if we got Osama bin Laden a lot sooner than that?” pic.twitter.com/tXsZHjJzaA

— Axios (@axios) November 18, 2018

Trump effectively minimized and then summarily dismissed a literal U.S. hero’s service to the country because he couldn’t take a little criticism. He also seemingly made up McRaven’s political leanings. The ill-advised comments prompted some outcry, as you might imagine.

Bill McRaven was NOT a Clinton “backer.” He never endorsed her or anyone for president. He was also on the short list that Chris Christie (then transition planning) put together of people who should be sought out for top natsec posts in a Trump administration. https://t.co/eFiw91oZTJ

— Karen Tumulty (@ktumulty) November 18, 2018

This morning’s interview was a perfect distillation of Trump. In span of minutes, he says no one has been “more with the military” than he has, then trashes Admiral McRaven as a hack who didn’t catch bin Laden fast enough

— Sam Stein (@samstein) November 18, 2018

Trump, a draft dodging coward, doesn’t love or respect our military. He uses them as political props.

Trump’s petulant response here disrespects the service of Adm.McRaven & countless other special ops heroes who serve honorably daily, despite politics.

Just despicable🤬 https://t.co/fG6dpnq75i

— Tara Setmayer (@TaraSetmayer) November 18, 2018

Correction needed to POTUS’s comment today that McRaven should have found bin Laden sooner. CIA did the “finding.” McRaven’s special operators did the “getting.” They moved within days of President Obama giving the order. https://t.co/7e79sDpENH

— Michael Morell (@MichaelJMorell) November 18, 2018

You get the idea.

A few hours later, as the noise around Trump’s comments to Wallace turned into a thunderous roar, the beleaguered president took to Twitter and dropped this turd of a tweet. (Pun definitely intended.)

So funny to see little Adam Schitt (D-CA) talking about the fact that Acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker was not approved by the Senate, but not mentioning the fact that Bob Mueller (who is highly conflicted) was not approved by the Senate!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) November 18, 2018

He’s talking about Adam Schiff, the U.S. Representative for California who is currently the Ranking Member of the United States House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. As the top Democrat in the House of Representatives charged with investigating Russia’s involvement in the 2016 election, Schiff has been a thorn in Trump’s side and a semi-frequent target of the president’s rage.

And yes, his name is Schiff. Two Fs. Not what Trump wrote.

Now, it could be a typo. The letters T and F are fairly close to one another on the standard QWERTY keyboard that most smartphones employ. Trump farts out so many tweets on a daily basis, he could have easily punched in the wrong letters. 

Or maybe it’s an autocorrect issue. Is the president secretly a fan of the Canadian comedy series, Schitt’s Creek? It could be that he’s texted about it enough that “Schitt” comes up as an autocorrect suggestion.

Of course, given Trump’s rep, both as president and as a human being, the most likely explanation is he committed an intentional typo in the name of juvenile humor. Which, hey, nothing against juvenile humor. But it’s maybe not the right tone to employ publicly when you’re the U.S. president, especially when you’re using it in the context of a comment that some might construe as an obstruction of justice.

Of course, that kind of ridiculous behavior from a grown-ass adult would get people talking about something other than Trump’s egregious put-down of a largely apolitical military veteran’s service.

But what do I know? Maybe it was a typo, or an unwanted autocorrect. As Mashable’s Matt Binder quipped in Slack when we talked about this whole episode, “hard to tell with our very smart 150-dimensional chess playing president.”

Indeed.

Still, social media did its thing and assumed Trump was acting with the worst intentions. In fairness to social media, there’s a lot of evidence to suggest that’s the safe assumption. Brace yourself for Trump burns and poop puns. Even Schiff joined in to take his shot.

BREAKING: Trump just called Congressman Adam Schiff “Little Adam Schitt.” This is so disgusting. A toddler for a president. Ridiculous. Absolutely insane. He needs to resign yesterday. What a pathetic disgrace to our country. America deserves better than this whack job man baby.

— Scott Dworkin (@funder) November 18, 2018

Dems have the House. Schiff is going to replace Nunes on the Intelligence Committee. The Schitt will hit the fan for Trump in the New Year.

— Wajahat Ali (@WajahatAli) November 18, 2018

Politics in 2018 is one hell of a ride.

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