Moment a pregnant woman runs over a young boy in China

Steve Jobs' widow and her boyfriend holiday in Croatia on the $100million yacht the late Apple founder built but never got to use Aide to ex-DNC chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz is arrested at DC airport while trying to LEAVE the country for Pakistan and charged with bank fraud What NOT to say in the office if you want to be respected: The most infuriating workplace jargon revealed - including 'touch base' and 'blue sky thinking' President Trump goes after Sen. Lisa Murkowski by name for not voting with other Republicans in favor of starting debate of an Obamacare repeal Go commando, have a 'safe' threesome and SHAVE each other: How to take your sex life from dull to daring without going the full Fifty Shades Chipotle is blaming one sick employee for its $1 billion in value loss after dozens of customers fell ill with norovirus Trump takes a victory lap with Melania after keeping his plan ... (more)

Trump asks about firing Sessions, calls his position – weak’

President Donald Trump has spoken with advisers about firing Attorney General Jeff Sessions and launched a fresh Twitter tirade Tuesday against the man who was the first U.S. senator to endorse his candidacy. "Attorney General Jeff Sessions has taken a VERY weak position on Hillary Clinton crimes & Intel leakers!" Trump tweeted.

Trump blasts attorney general, questions Ukraine role in U.S. election with no evidence

U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday continued to blast the investigation into alleged Russian meddling into last year's U.S. election, slamming his attorney general for not investigating his presidential rival in the race and raising questions, without offering evidence, about Ukraine's role. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has taken a VERY weak position on Hillary Clinton crimes & Intel leakers! Jeff Sessions was at the White House on Monday but did not meet with President Donald Trump, who referred to him in a tweet as "beleaguered" earlier in the day, White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said.

Apple Vs. Qualcomm Heats Up

We learned that Apple is stepping up its efforts against chipmaker Qualcomm in a new filing . This follows from the lawsuit filed in January of this year with Apple claiming that Qualcomm's business practices were unfair and that the company had withheld $1b in rebates from Apple after it had participated in aiding a South Korean antitrust investigation.

Trinity College professor calls white people a inhumana : a Let them f-ing diea

A Connecticut college professor has created a firestorm for calling white people "inhuman a-holes" who need to "die" following last week's shooting attack on congressional Republicans. Trinity College's Johnny Eric Williams' social media feed after the June 14 shooting of Louisiana Rep. Steve Scalise included racial tirades and commentary calling on minorities to "confront" white people and "end this now," a reference to an alleged system of "white supremacy."

Florida governor: Zuckerberg missed out by skipping Trump meeting

Many of the nation's top tech CEOs met with President Donald Trump again at the White House on Monday, but there were some notable exceptions: Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk of Tesla and SpaceX. Florida Republican Gov. Rick Scott, himself a former businessman, said that created a "missed opportunity" for them.

The Daily 202: Congressional shooting clouds final days of Georgia special election

Karen Handel campaigns in Johns Creek, Ga., ahead of Tuesday's runoff election to replace former Tom Price. Democrat Jon Ossoff is trying for an upset over Handel in the GOP-leaning Sixth Congressional District that stretches across greater Atlanta's northern suburbs.

Doctor: Social media platforms can feed hateful, negative rhetoric

The political climate on social media continues to further divide a country already at odds after last year's presidential election. The man who shot Congressman Steve Scalise and three others Wednesday at a ballpark in Virginia had an extensive history of posting his frustrations on social media before resorting to violence.

Professor mistakenly trolled says social media has become ‘a very dangerous place to be’

"I'm getting all of these hateful messages," said O'Grady, "and they started turning from, 'You should be fired,' to more along the lines of, 'You're completely unpatriotic and you don't deserve your position,' and started getting kind of nasty." O'Grady, a communications professor at New York University, scanned her social media profiles trying to make sense of the messages pouring in and quickly uncovered why she was being targeted.