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Gavin Long, the man who “targeted and assassinated” three police officers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana planned out the details of his horrific crime. On Monday, officials released surveillance photos and said he brought three guns and scoped out areas where he could specifically attack police.

The images released showed the 29-year-old outside the gas station and car wash where he shot dead three officers and wounded three others on Sunday. He was eventually killed 100 yards away, State Police Superintendent Col. Mike Edmonson told reporters in a news conference.

While he said the shooter used a rifle to kill the officers, investigators also recovered a handgun and a second rifle. He said they were working with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) to determine how he obtained the weapons, and were digging into his social media activity.

Long, who was from Kansas City, Missouri, had been in Baton Rouge for six days before committing the crime. Officials said there were no other shooters at the scene, but they were still unsure whether Long had any kind of help.

“This investigation will leave no stone unturned,” Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said. “This was a diabolical attack on the very fabric of society.”

Edmonson outlined a timeline of the shootings using an aerial photo and said one of the officers Long shot was sitting in his car.

Baton Rouge Police Chief Carl Dabadie, Jr. defended law enforcement amid increased criticism of so-called “militarized tactics” in response to violent protests in cities such as Ferguson, Missouri. The police chief said, “we are up against a force that hasn’t played by the rules.”

Of the officers who survived the shooting, one was released from the hospital Monday. Two others remained hospitalized, one still in critical condition.

Documents show that Long sought to change his name last year to Cosmo Setepenra. In a video reportedly posted to an online account belonging to Long on July 10, a post said he’s speaking from Dallas after five police officers were fatally shot there during a Black Lives Matter protest. The man in the post also addresses the protests in Baton Rouge and criticized what he perceived as oppression.

“You’ve got to fight back. That’s the only way a bully knows to quit.”

In yet another video posted prior, the man says that if anything ever happens to him he didn’t want to be linked to any groups. However, he mentioned once belonging to Nation of Islam. In documents seeking the name change, Long also referred to himself as a member of a black separatist group known as the Washitaw Nation.

Long, as was the case in the last police ambush shooting in Dallas, served in the U.S. armed forces. He was active in the Marines from 2005 to 2010, reaching the rank of sergeant. He deployed to Iraq from June 2008 to January 2009, according to military records.

While in the military, Long was awarded several medals, including one for good conduct, and received an honorable discharge. His occupational expertise was listed as “data network specialist.”

Gavin Long, the man who "targeted and

Melania Trump, the wife of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, gives a well-received speech to the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio.

Melania Trump, the wife of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, gives a well-received speech to the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio.

Melania Trump said during her speech at the Republican National Convention her husband would fight for the American people as president. The potential next First Lady of the United States praised her husband Donald Trump, calling him an “incredible leader” and the best candidate for president — “and it’s not even close.”

Opening an impassioned speech in support of her husband in Cleveland on Monday night, she thanked the delegates and supporters in the convention hall.

“You have all been very kind to Donald and me and our young son Baron and our whole family,” she told the crowd at the Quicken Loans Arena. “We are excited to be with you at this historic convention. I am so proud of your choice for President of the United States, my husband, Donald J. Trump.”

Melania Trump is a Slovene-American jewelry and watch designer, as well as a former model. But on Monday night, she commanded the convention stage and portrayed her husband in a manner few to no one else could do.

“I can assure you that he’s moved by this great honor. This year started with many candidates — 17 to be exact — and they deserve respect. However, when it comes to my husband, I will say that I’m definitely biased and for good reason.”

“I have been with him for 18 years. He never had an agenda when it comes to his patriotism. Like me, he loves this country.”

Melania told the crowd that “from a young age,” her parents instilled the values of “business, integrity and intelligence” in her.

“You must be willing to work for dreams.”

“My husband is concerned for our country,” she continued. “With all of my heart, I know he will make a great and lasting difference. If you want someone to fight for your country, he is the guy. He will never be bought. And most importantly, he will never let you down.”

“Our country is underperforming and needs new leadership.”

Melania Trump, during her speech at the

July 18, 2016: A firetruck blocks a road in Wuerzburg, southern Germany, after a man attacked people on a train. (Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa via AP)

July 18, 2016: A firetruck blocks a road in Wuerzburg, southern Germany, after a man attacked people on a train. (Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa via AP)

A teenage Afghan refugee injured multiple people when he went on a slashing spree with an axe and knife on a train in Germany Monday. He was shot and killed by police after three of the victims suffered serious injuries and one was slightly injured.

Another 14 people were being treated for shock. The train was en route from the Bavarian town of Treuchtlingen to Wuerzburg, which is located roughly 60 miles northwest of Nuremberg.

State Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann, Bavaria’s top security official, told Germany’s ARD television that the attacker had been identified as a 17-year-old Afghan refugee. Minister Herrmann said the suspect came to Germany under another controversial refugee resettlement program as an unaccompanied minor and lived in the Wuerzburg area. Initially, he stayed at a refugee facility in the town of Ochsenfurt and more recently with a foster family.

Witnesses say they had heard the suspect shout “Allahu Akbar” (“God Is Great” in Arabic) during the apparent terrorist attack, but Minister Herrmann said authorities were still investigating the motive and looking into reports that the suspect yelled “an exclamation” during the slashing spree.

Last year alone, Germany registered more than 1 million so-called refugees into the country, including more than 150,000 Afghans. However, it was not immediately clear whether the suspect was among them or someone who had been in the country for a longer time.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has doubled-down on taking in Muslim refugees even as she faces rising opposition within her own political coalition. Bavaria’s Christian Social Union (CSU), sister party of Merkel’s CDU, is in full-blown rebellion. But that isn’t stopping the pro-migrant crowd, who have made a concerted effort to completely overlook the burden to the generous welfare states in the EU and public outcry.

According to a recent report, German authorities reportedly believe that more than 1,200 women were sexually assaulted across the country on New Year’s Eve and that more than 2,000 men were allegedly involved. The German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung and other German broadcasters published a leaked police document last week that revealed details surrounding the rise of mass sex crimes by Muslim migrant refugees, according to The Washington Post.

Authorities believe that at least 600 of the sex assaults occurred in Cologne and 400 occurred in Hamburg. An official told the German paper that the mass sex crimes were a direct result of the European Union led by Germany taking large numbers of Muslim refugees.

“There is a connection between the emergence of this phenomenon and the rapid migration in 2015,” Holger Münch, president of the German Federal Crime Police Office, said, adding that he doesn’t think most of the suspected attackers will ever be convicted.

“We have to presume that many of those crimes will never be fully investigated,” Münch added.

A teenage Afghan refugee injured multiple people

A Republican National Convention logo is seen though silhouetted production equipment on a huge video screen at Quicken Loans Arena for the Republican National Convention, Sunday, July 17, 2016, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

A Republican National Convention logo is seen though silhouetted production equipment on a huge video screen at Quicken Loans Arena for the Republican National Convention, Sunday, July 17, 2016, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

The Republican National Convention daily Schedule is filled with an impressive list of speakers from Monday through Thursday. Here they are below. Worth noting, not that anyone should be surprised, but Donald Trump will break with convention tradition and introduce his wife Melania Trump on Monday night. Traditionally, the presumptive nominee does not make an appearance until the final day when they give their speech accepting their party’s nomination during primetime.

  • Monday, 18th July

    Headliners: Melania Trump, Lieutenant General (ret.) Michael Flynn, U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), Jason Beardsley and U.S. Rep. Ryan Zinke (Mont.)

  • Tuesday, 19th July

    Headliners: Tiffany Trump, Kerry Woolard, Donald Trump, Jr., U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (WV), Ben Carson and Kimberlin Brown.

  • Wednesday, 20th July

    Headliners: Lynne Patton; Eric Trump; former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Newt Gingrich, and Indiana Governor Mike Pence

  • Thursday, 21st July

    Headliners: Peter Thiel, Tom Barrack, Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump

The Republican National Convention daily Schedule is

The last of the Never Trump delegates tried to derail the rules vote on the Republican National Convention, but were easily defeated. (Photo: AP)

The last of the Never Trump delegates tried to derail the rules vote on the Republican National Convention, but were easily defeated. (Photo: AP)

CLEVELAND, OHIO–-Officials on Monday adopted convention rules by voice vote, setting off a protest on the first day of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. The convention rules were adopted in two voice votes over the objections from the dwindled and remaining delegates from the so-called “Never Trump” movement, shouting “roll call vote” in a last ditch effort to fracture party unity.

Still, the showdown, which was headed up by Ken Cuccinelli and Utah Sen. Mike Lee, effectively ended the Never Trump movement. In truth, the rules package past last week was the catalyst to squash the movement, but the vocal minority attempted to derail Mr. Trump, nevertheless. While they claim to simply want to influence the rules for the following convention, in truth they hope to have a fractured vote for the presumptive nominee with them backing Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.

The group wanted to change a rule that requires delegates to vote for the candidate that won the primaries and caucuses. Under the party rules, Mr. Trump’s is ensured the nomination because he’s accumulated more than the 1,237 bound delegates needed to win outright on the first ballot.

Mr. Cuccinelli, Sen. Lee and the other minority delegates not aligned with 44 other states were hoping for a state-by-state vote on the rules that bind delegates to back the New York businessman. While Mr. Trump won the most votes ever in a Republican presidential primary, Sen. Cruz won just 3 primaries. The rest of his victories came from party-held county conventions and caucuses.

The Trump Campaign was “livid” at the last ditch effort. The group claimed to have the signatures from a majority of at least eight state delegations, which could technically allow them to file a report challenging the convention rules or other decisions.

“Despite every obstacle thrown in our way, the movement of all the stakeholders involved in this effort have gained a majority of the delegates in 10 states,” M. Dane Waters, co-founder of Delegates Unbound said in a written statement. “Now we take this fight to the floor.”

While Trump wasn’t truly in danger of losing the necessary delegates to get nominated, the anti-Trump movement is an embarrassment to the party. Paul Manafort, Trump’s campaign manager, scoffed at the vote on Monday morning during a press briefing with reporters.

“We don’t expect anything to come out of the rules committee,” Mr. Manafort said. “It’s not a movement. It’s some rogue, recalcitrant delegates,” he added at another meeting.

 

Officials on Monday adopted convention rules by

Thomas Sowell, economist, author, syndicated columnist and People's Pundit Daily contributor.

Over the years, I’ve shared some clever images, jokes, and cartoons to expose the flawed mindset of those who hope to achieve coerced equality of outcomes with redistribution and high tax rates.

The size of a pizza vs the share of a slice.

The modern version of the Little Red Hen.

Washington’s Byzantine welfare state.

Chuck Asay’s overburdened tractor.

A left-wing nursery rhyme.

The Wizard-of-Id parody.

Two pictures showing how the welfare state begins and ends.

A socialist classroom experiment (including a video version).

The economics of redistribution in one image.

As you can see, this is a common-sense issue. When you give people money on the condition that they don’t earn much money, you create a perverse incentive for them to be unproductive.

Especially since, when people work more and earn more, they get hit by a combination of fewer handouts and more taxes. The net result is very high implicit marginal tax rates, in some cases rising above 100 percent.

Needless to say, it’s very foolish to have a welfare state that puts people in this untenable situation where the welfare state becomes a form of economic quicksand.

And it’s also foolish to punish the people who are pulling the wagon with high tax rates and pervasive double taxation of income that is saved and invested.

Russell Jaffe, one of our Cato interns, helpfully cranked out a clever little image showing how redistribution is bad for both those who receive and those who pay.

No wonder the welfare state and War on Poverty have been bad news for both taxpayers and poor people.

And the problem is getting worse, not better.

Let’s begin to wrap up. I shared a Thomas Sowell quote at the beginning to today’s column.

Now let’s read some of his analysis.

He aptly and succinctly summarized why redistribution is a no-win proposition (h/t: Mark Perry).

The history of the 20th century is full of examples of countries that set out to redistribute wealth and ended up redistributing poverty. …It is not complicated. You can only confiscate the wealth that exists at a given moment. You cannot confiscate future wealth — and that future wealth is less likely to be produced when people see that it is going to be confiscated. …Those who are targeted for confiscation can see the handwriting on the wall, and act accordingly. …We have all heard the old saying that giving a man a fish feeds him only for a day, while teaching him to fish feeds him for a lifetime. Redistributionists give him a fish and leave him dependent on the government for more fish in the future.

So what’s the bottom line?

The simple (and correct) answer is to dismantle the welfare state. State and local governments should be in charge of “means-tested” programs, ideally with much less overall redistribution (a goal even some Scandinavian nations are trying to achieve).

In effect, the goal should be to replicate the success of the Clinton-era welfare reform, but extending the principle to all redistribution programs (Medicaid, food stamps, EITC, etc).

P.S. Some honest leftists admit that the welfare state cripples independence and self reliance.

P.P.S. For those who like comparisons, you can peruse which states provide the biggest handouts and also which nations have the most dependency.

P.P.P.S. To end on a sour note, our tax dollars are being used by the Paris-based OECD to produce junk research that argues more tax-financed redistribution somehow is good for growth.

[mybooktable book=”wealth-poverty-and-politics-an-international-perspective” display=”summary” buybutton_shadowbox=”true”]

CATO economist Daniel Mitchell takes a humorous

Qandeel Baloch, the Pakistan Kim Kardashian, was murdered in an honor killing by her own brother.

Qandeel Baloch, the Pakistan Kim Kardashian, was murdered in an honor killing by her own brother.

Waseem Baloch, the brother of “Pakistan’s Kim Kardashian” Qandeel Baloch, says he’s “proud” he killed his sister, claiming he did it because “girls are born to stay home.”

The 25 year-old social media star Qandeel was the victim of a Muslim honor killing, strangled Friday at her family home in the city of Multan in the Pakistani province of Punjab. Baloch, her brother, was arrested and a short period during which he attempted to run. In his confession video, he not only didn’t show remorse or regret, but touted his crime as a good deed done.

“I am proud of what I did. I drugged her first, then I killed her,” Baloch told CNN. “She was bringing dishonor to our family.”

Qandeel Baloch became a social media sensation for posting defiant, sexual and increasingly political, videos on YouTube and Facebook. She called herself as a “modern day feminist” and had 750,000 followers on Facebook. Her brother said it was “too much” to see his friends share her pictures and video clips. Thus, killing his sister was a better decision than killing himself.

Qandeel was buried Sunday.

“I planned this after her scandal with the mufti and was waiting for the right time,” he says.

The incident he is referring to was when Qandeel made headlines for posting selfies on her Instagram account with Mufti Abdul Qavi, a senior member of the clergy. For Waseem, this was “the end of it.”

“I planned this after her scandal with the mufti and was waiting for the right time,” he said, adding that he brought honor to his family earned his place “in heaven.”

“Girls are born to stay home and follow traditions. My sister never did that.”

Pakistan’s Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif, has vowed to address the increasing problem of honor killings. However, critics say his actions speak louder than his words and the problem has always been present. It only appears to be occurring more frequently because it is only now being highlighted by mainstream media outlets.

“There is no honor in honor killing, in fact there can be nothing more degrading than to engage in brutal murder and to refer to it as honor,” he said in a press statement six months ago.

On the list of 145 countries featured in the World Economic Forum’s 2015 Gender Gap Report, Pakistan is second to last with regards to gender disparity.

According to the Independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, violence against women is rampant, with as many as 212 women being killed in the name of ‘honor’ in the first five months of 2016.

Waseem Baloch, the brother of "Pakistan's Kim

homebuilder-housing-reuters

Homebuilders and construction in the housing market. (PHOTO: REUTERS)

The National Association of Home Builders said Monday its monthly Housing Market Index (HMI) of home builder confidence in single-family housing market slipped one point to 59 in July. The reading missed the median economist forecast, as those surveyed by The Wall Street Journal expected a reading of 60.

“The economic fundamentals are in place for continued slow, steady growth in the housing market,” NAHB’s chief economist, Robert Dietz, said in a statement. “Job creation is solid, mortgage rates are at historic lows and household formations are rising. These factors should help to bring more buyers into the market as the year progresses.”

Even though new home construction has risen since the economy crawled out from recession in 2009, it is still historically very weak. When builder confidence is more optimistic, they are more likely to start construction on projects, which impacts building permits and housing starts. That helps the economy grow because it creates jobs and boosts sales of a range of items from lumber to furniture.

NAHB’s chairman, Ed Brady, a home builder and developer from Bloomington, Ill., said that while demand for housing is on the increase, other pressures are weighing down new construction.

“We are still hearing reports from our members of scattered softness in some markets, due largely to regulatory constraints and shortages of lots and labor,” Mr. Brady said.

Monday’s report showed that a measure of builder confidence in the present market fell one point to 63. Their confidence in the market over the next six months fell three points to 66. And a measure of traffic of prospective buyers fell a point to 45.

The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)

Marilyn-Mosby-Baltimore

Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby. (Photo: Tanjug/AP)

Baltimore Circuit Court Judge Barry Williams found Lt. Brian Rice, the highest ranking officer involved in the Freddie Gray case not guilty. Rice was the fourth officer to stand trial and the verdict comes after Judge Williams previously acquitted Officers Edward Nero and Caesar Goodson Jr. of all charges.

Judge Williams ruled that the state clearly failed to prove Lt. Rice had an evil intent and tamped up his rhetoric with stronger language than heard in the previous acquittals. He said prosecutors were asking him to make up evidence to support a conviction, but that “imaginings do not serve as a substitute for evidence.”

“A mere error in judgment is not enough to show corruption,” Judge Williams said, emphasizing that there was a difference between civil negligence and criminal liability

Lt. Rice, who walked into the courtroom on Monday with Officer Goodson behind him, was charged with involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment and misconduct in office. Judge Williams dropped a second-degree assault charge during the bench trial and prosecutors dropped a second misconduct-in-office charge.

The other previous case against Officer William Porter ended in a mistrial in December, 2015, which is scheduled to be retried in September, 2016. Officer Garrett Miller will go before a judge on July 27, and Sgt. Alicia White’s proceeding begins Oct. 13.

Meanwhile, there are growing calls to disbar Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby over her conduct during the investigation and prosecution. Professor John F. Banzhaf, a law professor at George Washington University School of Law, filed a disciplinary complaint with the Maryland Bar Counsel that states Mosby violated multiple provisions of the Maryland Lawyer’s Rules of Professional Conduct (RPC), to include withholding exculpatory evidence, making inappropriate statements in public (to poison the jury) and continuing to prosecute a case after it has been established there is insufficient evidence to support a conviction.

The professor is known for bringing complaints against against overzealous prosecutors in high profile cases, giving him the reputation for being a justice system watchdog. He played a pivotal role in the disbarment and successful civil lawsuits against Mike Nifong, the prosecutor who continued to proceed in the Duke lacrosse case even when it became clear it was a race-baiting, manufactured incident.

Professor Banzahaf called Marilyn Mosby “a runaway prosecutor” and claims she never even had probable cause to charge the six officers in the death of Freddie Gray. Further, he accuses Ms. Mosby of only filing those charges to stop the destructive rioting in Baltimore, something Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake infamously said she wanted to give them “space” to do.

“I heard your call for ‘No justice, no peace.’ Your peace is sincerely needed as I work to deliver justice on behalf of this young man,” Mrs. Mosby said in May of 2015. Now, with more “not guilty” verdicts almost assuredly on their way (from the bench of a black judge), a repeat riot in an already economically depressed city is increasingly likely.

Judge Williams may have handed a gift to those calling for Mosby to be disbarred. He said in the verdict on Monday that prosecutors misapplied the law regarding reckless endangerment. He stress that the law does not consider a failure to follow general orders, which had not even become official department policy, as proof of misconduct.

The verdict also comes at a time of increased tension across the nation over police shootings, the latest being the cases of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile. Both men were shot and killed, the former in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and latter in Falcon Heights, Minnesota. A second video surfaced showing the shooting of Mr. Sterling, which appears to show a gun in his right pocket. The video of Mr. Castile was taken by his girlfriend but only catches the moment after he was shot by a police officer.

On Sunday, three police officers were shot and killed in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The lone shooter, Gavin Long, who may or may not have had accomplices, was also killed. This follows the ambush shooting of five Dallas police officers the week prior by a black power nationalist and alleged member of the New Black Panther Party during a Black Lives Matter protest.

In Baltimore, sixty-five people taking part in a march against alleged police brutality were arrested over the weekend after they blocked part of Interstate 83, police said. Of the 65 arrested, 10 were juveniles. Those who were arrested were charged with failure to obey and illegally walking on a highway. While blocking Interstate 83, protesters chanted “hands up, don’t shoot.” The moniker was built upon a lie that took hold during the outrage in Ferguson, Missouri, over the police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown. Yet, despite the forensic evidence and witness testimony showing Brown was the aggressor who tried to take Officer Darren Wilson’s gun, it is still widely cited during BLM protests.

Baltimore Circuit Court Judge Barry Williams found

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, right, points to Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, left, during a rally in the Hoosier State. (Photo: Reuters)

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, right, points to Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, left, during a rally in the Hoosier State. (Photo: Reuters)

Donald Trump denied reports that he was wavering on his decision to name Indiana Gov. Mike Pence as his vice presidential running mate. He also acknowledged that he and Gov. Pence have different styles, and that he doesn’t necessarily expect him to use the same tactics that were used throughout the campaign.

In an interview Monday morning on Fox and Friends, he called the media reports “totally dishonest” and revealed his effort to correct the record that went ignored by The New York Times and others. The morning interview comes as Mr. Trump and his running mate appeared on CBS News on Sunday.

“We’re different people, I understand that,” Trump said in a preview of a 60 Minutes interview that the 2016 Republican ticket did together. “He won’t [call Clinton that name], I didn’t ask him to do it but I don’t think he should do it because its different for him.”

Trump used the example of how he calls Hillary Clinton “Crooked Hillary” as something that he doesn’t expect or want his right-hand man to do.

Gov. Pence didn’t take the bait when asked about the tone of Trump’s campaign.

“I think this is a good man who’s been talking about the issues the American people care about,” he said. “This campaign and Donald Trump’s candidacy has been about the issues the American people care about. They see America in decline at home and abroad, they see our porous borders, a Congress that’s unable to balance its budgets or deal with and end illegal immigration. They want a leader, they want leadership in Washington, D.C., that will solve problems and strengthen our country.”

Trump also reiterated during the interview that part of the reason why he picked Gov. Pence as his running mate was in an effort to unify the party.

The New York businessman chose Gov. Pence over former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, former military intelligence head Lt Gen. Michael Flynn and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, all of whom were in the top contention for the vice presidential nomination, in order to unify the Republican Party. While other reports suggested this is the first time Trump made that clear himself, it wasn’t. He said unity was a major factor during his press conference announcing his decision on Saturday.
[brid video=”54941″ player=”2077″ title=”Donald Trump Announces Mike Pence as Vice Presidential Candidate (71616)”]

Donald Trump denied reports that he was

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