Instant Alert: Federal judge rejects states' request to end the DACA program

Posted On // Leave a Comment

Your Message Subject or Title

  MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS   |   UNSUBSCRIBE   |   VIEW ONLINE
 
 
 
 
 

Federal judge rejects states' request to end the DACA program

by Tom Hals and Yeganeh Torbati on Sep 1, 2018, 1:49 AM

Advertisement

  • A Federal judge rejected a request from Texas and seven other states to end the DACA program, an Obama-era initiative allowing 700,000 young immigrants to stay in the US legally
  • The argument brought fourth by Texas and other states claimed that DACA recipients drove up the cost of healthcare and policing, while taking jobs away from legal residents.
  • The Trump administration said last September that it would halt the program within six months.

(Reuters) - A federal judge on Friday denied a request by Texas and other states governed by Republicans to immediately end a program launched by Democratic former President Barack Obama that protects immigrants brought to the United States illegally as children.

U.S. Judge Andrew Hanen of the Southern District of Texas said the states had shown they were harmed by the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program, or DACA, but, he said, they could not prevail legally because of "their delay in pursuing the claims they now bring concerning DACA," which was first established in 2012.

The program protects around 700,000 young adults from deportation and gives them work permits for two-year periods, after which they must re-apply.

Texas and other states that brought the lawsuit earlier this year had argued that DACAallows illegal aliens to remain in the country, which drives up the costs of healthcare and policing and makes it harder for lawful residents to find work.

The states also argued that the DACA program flouts the will of Congress because it was created without congressional action.

Civil rights organizations, businesses and universities had filed friend of the court briefs in the Texas case to protect DACA.

They argued that the states had failed to provide convincing evidence that DACA hurts their coffers and that by authorizing DACA recipients to work their states would get more tax revenue.

Hanen, who was appointed by Republican U.S. President George W. Bush, issued a second order on Friday giving Texas permission to appeal his ruling.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a statement after the ruling that the plaintiffs were "now very confident that DACA will soon meet the same fate" as a parallel Obama program, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, which was previously struck down by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Paxton led a coalition of dozens of states in taking legal action against that program.

"Our lawsuit is vital to restoring the rule of law to our nation's immigration system," Paxton said.

Republican President Donald Trump said last year that he would terminate DACA and end its protection for the immigrants who are sometimes called "Dreamers."

He gave the Republican-controlled Congress six months to replace it, but policy differences between Trump and lawmakers in both parties led to Congress' failing to act.

Courts have ruled that the program can stay in place for now, although new applications will not be accepted.


 
Share the latest business news with your network:

Facebook Share Twitter Share Email Share
  

Email sent to: nguyenvu1187.love5@blogger.com   |   Manage your email preferences   |   Unsubscribe

Terms of Service   |   Privacy Policy

Business Insider. 150 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10011
Sailthru

Instant Alert: Former staffer reveals how Trump fell in love with Twitter

Posted On // Leave a Comment

Your Message Subject or Title

  MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS   |   UNSUBSCRIBE   |   VIEW ONLINE
 
 
 
 
 

Former staffer reveals how Trump fell in love with Twitter

by David Choi on Sep 1, 2018, 12:40 AM

Advertisement

  • Justin McConney, a former Trump Organization staffer, claimed the real-estate mogul had him print out his tweets and read them out loud, according to a NY Mag report.
  • Donald Trump reportedly took a liking to his Twitter mentions and would have an aide print them out, using a Sharpie to mark up the ones he wanted to reply to.
  • Trump, who reportedly had a flip phone at the time, personally started tweeting after he received an Android phone in 2012.

A former Trump Organization staffer described Donald Trump's inexperience with the internet and claimed that, years ago, the real-estate mogul had him print out his Twitter mentions and read them aloud, according to a New York Magazine report published Friday.

Justin McConney, the Trump Organization's director of new media from 2011 to 2017, told New York Magazine that Trump would order people to reply to people who tweeted him. Trump, who reportedly had a flip phone at the time, personally started tweeting after he received an Android phone in 2012.

"He would say, 'I wanna see more of these! Get me more, get me more!,'" McConney said to the magazine.

Trump reportedly would have McConney print them out, marking which ones he wanted the aide to reply back to with a black Sharpie marker.

"He'd circle ones he wanted to reply to, and I'd go back and do the replies," McConney said.

The former aide said Trump eventually caught the social media bug and learned how to use it to bolster his celebrity.

"To him, unless it's on TV or in the newspaper, because he's old school, it's not going to mean anything," McConney reportedly said.

After shooting a series of low-budget video blogs, Trump "saw the potential with social media ... with free, earned media," McConney said.

SEE ALSO: Trump's 'unhinged rant' threw China under the bus — and it looks like North Korea now has the upper hand


 
Share the latest business news with your network:

Facebook Share Twitter Share Email Share
  

Email sent to: nguyenvu1187.love5@blogger.com   |   Manage your email preferences   |   Unsubscribe

Terms of Service   |   Privacy Policy

Business Insider. 150 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10011
Sailthru

Instant Alert: Meet the Democratic businessman who wants to beat Trump in 2020 and give every American a basic income: 'Donald Trump gives entrepreneurs a bad name'

Posted On // Leave a Comment

Your Message Subject or Title

  MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS   |   UNSUBSCRIBE   |   VIEW ONLINE
 
 
 
 
 

Meet the Democratic businessman who wants to beat Trump in 2020 and give every American a basic income: 'Donald Trump gives entrepreneurs a bad name'

by Dylan Love on Aug 31, 2018, 9:02 PM

Andrew Yang

  • Andrew Yang, a long-time entrepreneur-turned-politician, wants President Donald Trump's job in 2020. 
  • He believes in a universal basic income, and supports reforms to prepare the United States for the revolutions in artificial intelligence and autonomy still to come.
  • He's probably also the first candidate to accept donations in the form of cryptocurrency. 

If you ask presidential candidate Andrew Yang to talk about the future, he’ll start with with truck drivers.

The 43-year-old entrepreneur-turned-politician is a ball of statistics on the pending driverless car revolution. Autonomous vehicles are already on the road today, poised to rise across private and commercial sectors. This will see personal convenience soar to new heights, but will lay carnage to the contemporary trucking industry in the process.

“The average truck driver is a 49-year-old male with a high school education and one year of college. There are 3.5 million of them in America; it’s the most common job in 29 states.” Yang said. “If you project what happens in the next five to ten years, it’s going to be disastrous for these communities.” He cited “another 5 million Americans” who work in the truck stops, motels, and diners that serve the truckers and their vehicles. What happens to the local economies when those trucks stop coming, he asks — and what happens to their politics?

Yang’s pre-politics career in business cuts across education, healthcare software, mobile technology, and nonprofit fundraising. President Barack Obama named him a Presidential Ambassador for Global Entrepreneurship in 2015 —  indeed, Yang presents a sharp ideological contrast to the current US president.

“Donald Trump gives entrepreneurs a bad name because he's a marketing charlatan, not a business organization builder,” he said. “I believe that I have a lot of the qualities Trump pretended to have.”

As President of the United States, Yang wants to flex his business sense to bring about a program called the Freedom Dividend, a basic income program to help dampen automation’s impact on human life and work.

He’s given a lot of thought to our unknown future as a suite of emergent technologies spin into high gear. He suggests that the rise of AI will force us to reexamine what we mean by the word “work,” what we value as a society, and how we want our economy to function. He acknowledges that it could be a massive problem, but “it could also be a massive opportunity.”

Yang is campaigning right now for your 2020 presidential vote. A lightly edited transcript of our interview with him follows.

BUSINESS INSIDER: Isn't it too soon to be running for President?

ANDREW YANG: It isn’t too soon! I’m not even the first one to declare. One person declared before me, a congressman from Maryland named John Delaney. There are no formal regulations on timing, it’s more tradition than anything. I think that right now we are going through the greatest technological and economic shift in human history, and our political leadership is completely out to lunch on it. The only requirements to run are the Constitutional requirements — to be a natural born citizen, 35 years or older — and I’m running to win.

Trump won in 2016 because we automated away four million manufacturing jobs in Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin — the swing states that he needed to carry in order to win. We're about to do the same thing again, this time to people who work in retail, trucking, transportation, call centers, fast food, and throughout the economy. Artificial intelligence is going to do more and more of what humans presently do. Most of our political class won't even acknowledge that this is the central challenge of this era, and it's about to ramp up.

BI: You’re seeking the Democratic nomination. What does your platform look like?

AY: The core of my campaign is the Freedom Dividend, in which every American adult between the ages of 18 and 64 would receive $1,000 per month. You can’t fight job automation the same way you fight climate change, by asking people to sacrifice or be more vigilant about the resources they consume. We have to go the other direction and spread the bounty of automation and new technology as broadly and quickly as possible. Capitalism functions much better when people have money to spend, and right now 59% of Americans can’t afford an unexpected $500 expense.

The Roosevelt Institute found that a basic income of $1,000 a month would grow the economy by $2.5 trillion per year and create 4.5 million new jobs. We’d be rolling out the Freedom Dividend within my first year as President, because that’s what I’d be elected to do.

BI: Universal basic income has been a hip idea for a while, but it seems like it never goes anywhere in America. Where does the resistance come from?

AY: The United States has had a basic income program for the past 36 years. Alaska’s petroleum dividend passed the House of Representatives in 1971 under Nixon, and it gives each resident of the state between $1,000 and $2,000 a year for life. It's improved children's nutrition, created jobs, lowered income inequality, and remains wildly popular in a deep red state. It was sold by a Republican governor as a way to keep money out of the hands of government and in the hands of the people. Anyone who thinks this isn’t possible just isn't paying attention to our history.

The fundamental resistance is born of a misplaced sense of scarcity. It’s easy to say, "Hey, we can't afford that. The money has to come from somewhere, and it would bankrupt the economy." But this is nonsense on its face. Our economy is now $19 trillion per year, up $4 trillion in the last 10 years alone. We can easily afford a dividend of $1,000 per American adult between the ages of 18-64. There are four mechanisms to pay for it in my plan, and one of them is a new value added tax for companies that benefit the most from automation. This is necessary because income taxes are terrible at generating revenue from AI, software, and machines. The beneficiaries tend to be large global tech companies that are great at reducing their tax bill.

BI: Are you the first presidential candidate to accept cryptocurrency donations? Would you bring any formal cryptocurrency regulation to the United States?

YA: I believe I’m the first candidate to accept crypto donations. We looked into the regulations and as long as we gather all the identifying information for each contribution, then it's perfectly fine. Political campaigns can accept contributions of any type as long as you record the value. We could accept a donation of ham sandwiches, for example.

Under my administration, we'd have a coherent set of rules for cryptocurrency, because it’s a bit of the Wild West right now. I'm pessimistic that this administration is going to grapple with the problem meaningfully, but there's a lot of experimentation going on. Lack of coherent regulation isn’t curbing people from experimenting and innovating with the blockchain and finding new implementations for it.

BI: What do you think about a national cryptocurrency?

YA: I think a national cryptocurrency could be a phenomenal idea that makes a lot of sense, but first we need to create more meaningful touchpoints in the economy for people to participate.  Part of my campaign is that we need a new “social currency,” backed by the federal government and worth real money. This currency maps to various positive social behaviors that we want to encourage more of, things like taking care of the elderly, nurturing children, volunteering in a community, or improving the environment. The idea is based on something called "timebanking" that's been in effect in a couple hundred communities around the US for a number of years. We need a way to recognize and reinforce helpful behavior. This would most likely look like a smartphone app.

BI: Generally speaking, what can people do to prepare for your vision of the future?

YA: Our conception of work needs to become much broader. Let's say my wife is at home right now with our two young boys, which she is. The market values that at zero and does not see that as a job. If she were hired to take care of someone else’s kids, then that would be a job. Right now we base our notion of “work” on the market: you get paid for jobs, but not for non-jobs. The problem here is that the market is going to value human labor less and less.

Those previously mentioned 3.5 million truck drivers haven’t changed as humans. They didn’t suddenly forget how to drive a truck. It’s just that now the truck drives itself, and the drivers are going to watch their labor value go from $45,000 a year to near zero.


 
Share the latest business news with your network:

Facebook Share Twitter Share Email Share
  

Email sent to: nguyenvu1187.love5@blogger.com   |   Manage your email preferences   |   Unsubscribe

Terms of Service   |   Privacy Policy

Business Insider. 150 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10011
Sailthru

Instant Alert: Trump's US-Mexico NAFTA deal is already taking heat for failing to include Canada

Posted On // Leave a Comment

Your Message Subject or Title

  MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS   |   UNSUBSCRIBE   |   VIEW ONLINE
 
 
 
 
 

Trump's US-Mexico NAFTA deal is already taking heat for failing to include Canada

by Michelle Mark on Aug 31, 2018, 6:49 PM

Advertisement

  • The Trump administration notified Congress on Friday it intends to enter a bilateral trade deal with Mexico — and Canada can join later.
  • Talks between US and Canadian officials broke down on Friday, in part due to leaked Trump comments saying the US doesn't intend to compromise.
  • More negotiations between Canada and the US are scheduled for next week, and representatives from both countries said Friday they're hopeful a trilateral deal can be reached.
  • But lawmakers and trade groups were skeptical of Trump's US-Mexico deal, saying Canada must be included in the final version.

Lawmakers and trade groups reacted with skepticism and dismay on Friday, after the Trump administration notified Congress of its intent to enter a bilateral trade deal with Mexico — and Canada could join later "if it is willing."

Negotiations on the North American Free Trade Agreement between US and Canadian officials went on through much of the week, but abruptly fell apart on Friday after remarks were leaked from President Donald Trump, who reportedly said he didn't intend to compromise with Canada at all.

According to The Toronto Star, Trump told Bloomberg News reporters on Thursday that any deal reached would be "totally on our terms" and suggested that Canadians would have "no choice" but to go along with the plan out of fear that Trump would impose auto tariffs.

US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, however, said in a statement Friday that it will continue negotiating with Canada with the intent of eventually including the country in a trilateral NAFTA deal.

But backlash against the US-Mexico deal quickly ensued. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi called the deal an "incomplete NAFTA notification" in a statement, saying that fixing the trade deal would require both Mexico and Canada.

"We still don't know the specifics of this trade agreement, or whether it will measure up to the claims of an Administration with a terrible record of delivering," Pelosi said. "I remain hopeful of progress, but without a final agreement with Canada, the Administration's work is woefully incomplete."

Sen. Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat, tweeted that his state's economy is intertwined with Canada's — as are most states across the country.

"I cannot support a trade agreement to replace NAFTA that does not include Canada, Vermont's biggest trading partner," he said. "There would be grave concerns on both sides of the aisle about proceeding with an incomplete agreement."

Beyond just lawmakers, trade groups reacted with concern, and in some cases, anger.

"After a week filled with insults directed at Canada, today's announcement that the United States is notifying Congress of its intention to sign a trade deal with Mexico is disheartening," Sharon Treat, senior attorney of the Institute for Agriculture & Trade Policy, said in a statement. "America's farmers deserve better. A NAFTA deal without Canadian participation is not a completed deal."

The Information Technology Industry Council also said a bilateral deal would risk harming American companies and workers, and negate any positive effects of the trade agreement.

"Any such changes to the existing NAFTA agreement would be highly disruptive to global supply chains and to the regional economy," ITI CEO Dean Garfield said in a statement.

SEE ALSO: Trump just decided to move forward with a trade deal with Mexico, cutting out Canada for now. Here's what happens next.

DON'T MISS: US-Canada NAFTA talks break up after inflammatory Trump comments leak


 
Share the latest business news with your network:

Facebook Share Twitter Share Email Share
  

Email sent to: nguyenvu1187.love5@blogger.com   |   Manage your email preferences   |   Unsubscribe

Terms of Service   |   Privacy Policy

Business Insider. 150 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10011
Sailthru

Instant Alert: Apple says some iPhone 8 devices have a manufacturing defect and will fix them for free — here's how to see if you're affected

Posted On // Leave a Comment

Your Message Subject or Title

  MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS   |   UNSUBSCRIBE   |   VIEW ONLINE
 
 
 
 
 

Apple says some iPhone 8 devices have a manufacturing defect and will fix them for free — here's how to see if you're affected

by Matt Weinberger on Aug 31, 2018, 6:42 PM

iPhone 8

  • Apple says that a small percentage of iPhone 8 devices might be affected by a "manufacturing defect" that can cause random freezing and other problems. 
  • You can check if your phone is affected here.
  • Apple is offering free repairs, but you have to mail away your phone. 

Apple disclosed on Friday that "a very small percentage" of iPhone 8 smartphones have a "manufacturing defect" that can freeze the screen, make the device restart unexpectedly, or even cause it to not turn on. 

If you own an iPhone 8, you can check whether or not you're affected by putting your phone's serial number into a web form at Apple's website. The good news is that Apple will repair any affected iPhone 8 for free, by replacing its logic board. 

"Affected units were sold between September 2017 and March 2018 in Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Macau, New Zealand, and the U.S.," writes Apple. Given that the iPhone 8 was only introduced in September 2017, that means that it could affect any early adopter. It appears that this was the first time these problems were disclosed.

If your phone needs a repair, you have a few options. You can take your phone in to any authorized Apple repair center, an Apple retail store, or mail it in. In all cases, Apple says, it'll get mailed away to one of the company's main repair facilities to get fixed up. 

The free repair offer comes with a few caveats: If your screen is cracked or there's any other kind of damage, you'll have to get that fixed, first. If Apple does that fix itself, it'll charge you for that repair, even beyond the free logic board replacement. 

The iPhone 8, introduced in late 2017, could be the last model without a notch. On September 12th, Apple is expected to release a trio of new iPhones that embrace the edge-to-edge design of the iPhone X, the current highest-end model. 

Apple did not immediately respond to a request for further information. 


 
Share the latest business news with your network:

Facebook Share Twitter Share Email Share
  

Email sent to: nguyenvu1187.love5@blogger.com   |   Manage your email preferences   |   Unsubscribe

Terms of Service   |   Privacy Policy

Business Insider. 150 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10011
Sailthru

Instant Alert: One of Apple’s secretive self-driving cars got in a crash for the first time — but it doesn't seem to be Apple's fault

Posted On // Leave a Comment

Your Message Subject or Title

  MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS   |   UNSUBSCRIBE   |   VIEW ONLINE
 
 
 
 
 

One of Apple's secretive self-driving cars got in a crash for the first time — but it doesn't seem to be Apple's fault

by Becky Peterson on Aug 31, 2018, 6:36 PM

Advertisement

  • An Apple autonmous vehicle was involved in an accident on August 24, marking a first for the company.
  • In a filing with the California DMV viewed on Friday, Apple reported that one of its vehicles got rear-ended while slowly merging onto a freeway just 3.5 miles from its Cupertino, California headquarters.
  • It was rear-ended while waiting for a safe gap to merge onto a freeway.
  • Nobody got hurt.

An Apple autonomous vehicle got rear-ended last week, marking the first time one of its secretive self-driving cars was involved in an accident.

In a form filed with the Department of Motor Vehicles on August 24th, viewed by Business Insider on August 31, Apple revealed that one of its test vehicles was rear-ended while preparing to merge onto the freeway in Sunnyvale, California, about 3.5 miles away from Apple's Cupertino headquarters.

The car was in autonomous mode and driving less than 1 mile per hour while "waiting for a safe gap to complete the merge" when a 2016 Nissan Leaf hit it from behind, according to the filing. The Nissan was apparently going 15 miles per hour, according to the form. Both cars were damaged, but nobody got hurt. 

As of May, Apple had 55 autonomous vehicles on the road in California— more than any other company besides Cruise, GM's autonomous vehicle arm, which had 104 cars at the time. 

The accident was a first for Apple's autonomous car unit, and relatively minor compared to accidents that have occured with some of the company's competitors. Apple hasn't publicly discussed its plans for these self-driving cars, and most of what we know about them come from official filings with the DMV. 

Uber shut down its self-driving car program in Arizona after one of its vehicles struck and killed a pedestrian there in March. Also in March, a Tesla Model X crashed into a barrier while in the semi-autonmous autopilot mode. The driver of the vehicle was killed in the collision.

Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

SEE ALSO: Apple has the second-largest fleet of self-driving cars in California — bigger than Tesla, Waymo, or Uber


 
Share the latest business news with your network:

Facebook Share Twitter Share Email Share
  

Email sent to: nguyenvu1187.love5@blogger.com   |   Manage your email preferences   |   Unsubscribe

Terms of Service   |   Privacy Policy

Business Insider. 150 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10011
Sailthru