U.S. sprinter Fred Kerley to contest anti-doping provisional suspensionNew Foto - U.S. sprinter Fred Kerley to contest anti-doping provisional suspension

American Olympic-medal winning sprinter Fred Kerley is fighting his provisional suspension for violating anti-doping whereabouts rules. The Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) announced the suspension on Tuesday. Three missed drug tests or whereabouts failures over 12 months are deemed to be a violation. According to the organization, a whereabouts failure occurs when athletes fail to provide, or update, their location to be reached for out-of-competition testing. The sanction is two years of ineligibility or a reduction to at least 12 months, depending on their level of fault. "(Kerley) strongly believes that one (or) more of his alleged missed tests should be set aside either because he was not negligent or because the Doping Control Officer did not do what was reasonable under the circumstances to locate him at his designated location," read a statement from the office of Los Angeles-area attorney Howard L. Jacobs. "Fred will not comment further at this time out of respect for the process, and looks forward to presenting his case to the appointed hearing panel." The statement was posted to Kerley's X account on Tuesday. Kerley won the bronze medal in the 100-meter at the 2024 Paris Olympics and a silver in the event at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. He also has won five total medals at the past four world championships in either individual or relay events. A 30-year-old Texas native, Kerley pulled out of the USA Track and Field Championships last month, citing a difficult year. "The 100m should be a straight sprint. 2025 has presented many hurdles. Taking some time out to get back on track. No USATF Champs this year. Thanks to all my supporters," he posted. Kerley was arrested in Florida in May and charged with touch or strike battery after his former girlfriend alleged he struck her in the face with a closed fist. At the time, his attorney told The Athletic that Kerley was arrested without a "thorough investigation." "Fred never battered anyone," Richard L. Cooper said in a statement to The Athletic. "We are focused on working with prosecutors to show that this arrest was a mistake and no charges should be filed. I am confident in that goal." --Field Level Media

U.S. sprinter Fred Kerley to contest anti-doping provisional suspension

U.S. sprinter Fred Kerley to contest anti-doping provisional suspension American Olympic-medal winning sprinter Fred Kerley is fighting his ...
Tom Dundon reportedly reaches agreement to buy Portland Trail BlazersNew Foto - Tom Dundon reportedly reaches agreement to buy Portland Trail Blazers

Tom Dundon has reportedly reached an agreement to buy the Portland Trail Blazers from the estate of deceased owner Paul Allen, Eben Novy-Williams of Sporticoreported Wednesday. Dundon also owns the NHL franchise, the Carolina Hurricanes. Allen's estate reportedly dictated that his teams should be sold following his death, which occurred in October 2018. Allen also owned the Seattle Seahawks and was a part-owner of the Seattle Sounders FC. This breaking news story will be updated.

Tom Dundon reportedly reaches agreement to buy Portland Trail Blazers

Tom Dundon reportedly reaches agreement to buy Portland Trail Blazers Tom Dundon has reportedly reached an agreement to buy the Portland Tra...
LA banned the N and C words from council meetings. Does the First Amendment allow that?New Foto - LA banned the N and C words from council meetings. Does the First Amendment allow that?

As deadly wildfires raged across Southern California in January, a Los Angeles city official lamented to the city council and others how they were forced to listen to hateful, vulgar language from some members of the public. He thanked the audience for their patience in listening to one man's tirade in which he yelled "burn, Palisades, burn!" and used the N-word to describe council members. It wasfar from an isolated incident. A small group of people have repeatedly showed up to comment at the council meetings, spewing the N-word and C-word while ranting about everything from the city's homeless crisis to mask-wearing and the 2028 Olympics. Council members finally had enough. In late July, they passed a motion banning the public from using those two words during council meetings, despite warnings from First Amendment groups that the move could put the city on a slippery slope toward unconstitutional censorship. Already, the ban is getting put to the test. Just two days after the council passed the new rule, a man used the N-word three times in less than 10 seconds during his three minutes of speaking time. Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson asked for the clerk to pause his time. "Speaker, you have used the N-word, which is a violation of Council Rule 7," Harris-Dawson said. "This is your only warning that this word and any of its variations described in Council Rule 7 may not be used again in this council meeting, any future council meeting or future council committee meetings." If the man continued to use the term, Harris-Dawson said, he would risk forfeiting the rest of his speaking time and being removed from the meeting. Thecouncil's motionsaid the N-word and the C-word, a crude term often used to disparage women, are the "most frequently used offensive and injurious epithets" at city council meetings. It said such words are "inherently harmful," citing the U.S. Supreme Court's1942 decision in Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire. The ruling said some terms "by their very utterance inflict injury or tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace." Such "fighting words," the court found, are not protected by the First Amendment. That's the argument city officials are making to justify the ban. These aren't ordinary words, city officials say. Under the new rule, a speaker who uses the term will first receive a verbal warning. If they use it again, the presiding officer will again tell them they cannot use such language and indicate that the need to reissue the warning has disrupted the meeting, therefore allowing the council to cut off the speaker. The speaker may also be removed from the proceedings and banned from future meetings, according to the motion. It specifies that violations of the rule would not invoke criminal or financial penalties. Free speech groups have raised concerns about the rule and its First Amendment implications. The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE), urged the council not to adopt the measure, sayingin an April 29 letterthe rule would "implement an unconstitutional solution when better alternatives that do not infringe on the speech rights of your constituents are available." Likewise, the First Amendment Coalition, a nonprofit organization thatfocuses on First Amendment issues in California,wrote a similarly worded letterto the council raising concerns. The group said it "understands and sympathizes" with the city over the words and their impact on the community. Still, the group said the rule violates the First Amendment and opens the city up to lawsuits. "As with other ill-fated attempts to silence offensive speech, that result would amplify the objectionable message and allow those who utter it to claim victory as defenders of free speech," the group wrote. "Also, the first victim of censorship is rarely the last, and attempts at restricting offensive speech often lead to censorship of those they are intended to protect." But the council's motion, which was presented in March and passed on July 30, argued that action was necessary because the terms had been used and disrupted the meetings "on many occasions." The sergeants-at-arms "prevented fights that were on the cusp of breaking out" on at least two occasions, the motion said. It acknowledged that the council "faces competing duties" in being obligated to hear from the public and give them opportunities to exercise their First Amendment rights while still protecting council members and others in attendance at the meetings. "It is understandable, given the rough and tumble of city council hearings why governments would want rules of decorum," saidBen Wizner, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. "The problem is, the cost is too high, and it gives them too much authority to suppress and censor opposing views." But a spokesperson for Harris-Dawson said the measure was not meant to suppress free speech. "This is not a ban on offensive speech in general, nor does it limit the public's right to criticize, protest, or speak passionately," the spokesperson said. "Instead, it draws a line at language that, by consistent and documented use, has disrupted the Council's ability to conduct public business and discouraged public participation." Harris-Dawson's spokesperson described the ban as a "narrowly focused rule" meant to prevent disruptions and maintain a civil environment. "These slurs are not being restricted because of the viewpoints they may express, but because they have repeatedly incited disruption, escalated tensions and silenced the participation of others," the spokesperson said. Right before council meeting broadcasts begin, a disclaimer warns that the "following content may contain offensive language not suitable for some audiences" and that "viewer discretion is advised." "It's almost like you're about to watch an episode of 'Jerry Springer,'" said Stephanie Jablonsky, FIRE's senior program counsel for public advocacy. During the council's July 30 meeting, a member of the public repeatedly used both terms and said the council could make him a "millionaire" after he sues on free speech grounds. Thecouncil voted in 2014 to settle a free speech lawsuitbrought by a man who was kicked out of a city commission meeting for wearing a Ku Klux Klan hood and shirt emblazoned with the N-word. Another man used the N-word several times in condemning the rule, along with a call to "send the Jews back to Israel" and a reference to President Donald Trump's administration being "the only America of constitutional betterment." Kathy Schreiner, thepresident of the Van Nuys Neighborhood Council, whichurged the city council to pass the measure, said her group's meetings have also been disrupted by such language. Schreiner said she has "frequently been called the C-word" since starting her position in December 2022. The council's former president, Michael Browning, was also "frequently" called the N-word in meetings throughout his two-year tenure, she wrote. "The (Van Nuys Neighborhood Council) has an unusually small attendance from the public at our meetings, and we know that one major reason is how difficult it is to sit through meetings where so many vulgar and nasty public comments are made," Schreiner said. She requested the city council "explore whether there is some way you could help prohibit the use of these epithets at all Neighborhood Council Board and Committee meetings." ThePalms Neighborhood Council also askedfor the city council to pass the ban and "apply the same changes to Neighborhood Council meetings." Both city and neighborhood council meetings attract people who are "able to disrupt discussions for sport" using "vile language and pointless hate speech," the statement read. "Transparency in government is crucial, and stakeholders must be allowed to criticize the work of government without fear of reprisal," the statement went on to say. "But this process is actually degraded and undermined when individuals with no productive aims destroy the public dialogue and engagement with hate speech targeted only at blowing up the process." But the First Amendment "exists for this exact reason," Jablonsky said. The remedy, in her view, is to "punish the disruption" and not the speaker. Though certain terms may be offensive and harmful to many people, Jablonsky said it's vital to resist any efforts to ban words. "If we don't, we are setting a dangerous precedent for government to regulate what we say," she said. "Any inch they are given will absolutely get used." Wizner agreed, saying the "only speech that needs constitutional protection is speech that deeply offends." The ACLU's2024 article, "Defending Speech We Hate,"noted that the organization has defended the free speech rights of numerous groups it strongly disagrees with – among them neo-Nazis, white supremacists and the National Rifle Association. "Our view is if the First Amendment doesn't protect the NRA in New York, it doesn't protect the ACLU in Texas," Wizner said. But the council has maintained that its actions are both legal and necessary to address terms that have "repeatedly incited disruption, escalated tensions and silenced the participation of others" at meetings. "Just like courtrooms and school board meetings, Council Chambers are limited public forums where reasonable time, place, and manner rules apply," Harris-Dawson's spokesperson said. "This motion is about preserving access and safety for everyone, not censoring ideas, but safeguarding the ability of all residents to speak and be heard without intimidation or verbal abuse." BrieAnna Frank is a First Amendment Reporting Fellow at USA TODAY. Reach her atbjfrank@usatoday.com. USA TODAY's coverage of First Amendment issues is funded through a collaboration between the Freedom Forum and Journalism Funding Partners.Funders do not provide editorial input. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:LA bans N-word, C-word at council meetings, sparking free speech debate

LA banned the N and C words from council meetings. Does the First Amendment allow that?

LA banned the N and C words from council meetings. Does the First Amendment allow that? As deadly wildfires raged across Southern California...
How the unraveling of two Pentagon projects may result in a costly do-overNew Foto - How the unraveling of two Pentagon projects may result in a costly do-over

By Alexandra Alper WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Donald Trump's Navy and Air Force are poised to cancel two nearly complete software projects that took 12 years and well over $800 million combined to develop, work initially aimed at overhauling antiquated human resources systems. The reason for the unusual move: officials at those departments, who have so far put the existing projects on hold, want other firms, including Salesforce and billionaire Peter Thiel's Palantir, to have a chance to win similar projects, which could amount to a costly do-over, according to seven sources familiar with the matter. Trump took office vowing to rid the government of what he calls waste and abuse. The website of the Department of Government Efficiency, the agency he created to spearhead those efforts, lists over $14 billion in Defense Department contracts it claims to have cancelled. But seven months into his presidency, some of his own actions have complicated DOGE's work, from firing the Pentagon's inspector general to issuing an executive order prioritizing speed and risk-taking in defense acquisitions. Coupled with high-level vacancies in the Navy and Air Force that persisted well into the summer, the moves limit oversight of the Pentagon's contracting process and risk wasting hundreds of millions of additional taxpayer dollars as old projects are thrown out and new projects are agreed to, Reuters reporting based on sources, internal emails and documents, shows. "There is a very real sense that we are in the regulatory Wild West with this administration – and it should come as no surprise that the traditional limits of 'normal contracting' are repeatedly going to be pushed and pressed in this environment," said Franklin Turner, a federal contracting lawyer at McCarter & English. He said it is legal for the government to terminate any contract "for convenience," but said the Pentagon would be on the hook to reimburse the companies for wind-down costs plus take on the cost of any new replacement project. Trump officials say the administration is striving to make the contracting process more efficient. "Defense Secretary Hegseth is doing a great job restoring a focus on warfighters at the DOD while carrying out the American people's agenda to more effectively steward taxpayer dollars," White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly said in a statement. Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson said the agency is taking "swift action" to fix the "antiquated" defense contracting process by implementing Trump's executive orders. "This is how we will rebuild the military with necessary speed while ensuring taxpayer dollars are spent wisely in the process," she added. 'STRATEGIC PAUSE' In 2019, Accenture said it had won a contract to expand an HR platform to modernize the payroll, absence management, and other HR functions for the Air Force with Oracle software. The project, which includes other vendors and was later expanded to include Space Force, grew to cost $368 million and was scheduled for its first deployment this summer at the Air Force Academy. An April "status update" on the project conducted by the Air Force and obtained by Reuters described the project as "on track," with initial deployment scheduled for June, noting that it would end up saving the Air Force $39 million annually by allowing it to stop using an older system. But on May 30, Darlene Costello, then-Acting assistant Secretary of the Air Force, sent out a memo placing a "strategic pause" on the project for ninety days and calling for the study of alternate technical solutions, according to a copy of the memo seen by Reuters that was previously unreported. Costello, who has since retired, was reacting to pressure from other Air Force officials who wanted to steer a new HR project to SalesForce and Palantir , three sources said. Palantir co-founder Thiel was an early backer of President Donald Trump and has close ties with key Washington lawmakers, including Vice President JD Vance, whom he supported in a 2022 U.S. Senate race. Palantir in April won a $30 million contract from the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to develop an operating system that identifies undocumented immigrants and tracks self-deportations, its largest single award from the agency among 46 federal contract actions since 2011. The Air Force said in a statement that it "is committed to reforming acquisition practices, assessing the acquisition workforce, and identifying opportunities to improve major defense acquisition programs." Accenture, Costello, Palantir and SalesForce did not respond to requests for comment. Space Force, which operates within the Air Force, was set to receive the Air Force's new payroll system in the coming months. But it is also pulling out of the project because officials there want to launch yet another HR platform project to be led by Workday, according to three people familiar with the matter. The service put out a small business tender on May 7 for firms to research HR platform alternatives, with the goal of selecting a company that will recommend Workday as the best option, the people said. Space Force did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Now the Air Force and Space Force "want to start over with vendors that do not meet their requirements, leading to significant duplication and massive costs," said John Weiler, director of the Information Technology Acquisition Advisory Council, a government-chartered nonprofit group that makes recommendations to improve federal IT contracting. Oracle said in a statement it was "working closely with DOGE to accelerate the government's transformation to modern technology at the best price for the taxpayer." 'BEYOND EXASPERATED' In 2022, the Honolulu-based Nakupuna Companies took over a 2019 project with other firms to integrate the Navy's payroll and personnel systems into one platform using Oracle software and known as "NP2". The project, which has cost about $425 million since 2023, according to the Government Accountability Office, was set to be rolled out earlier this year after receiving a positive review by independent reviewer and consulting firm Guidehouse in January, according to a copy obtained by Reuters. But the head of Navy's human resources, now retired Admiral Rick Cheeseman, sought to cancel the project according to a June 5 memo seen by Reuters,  directing another official to "take appropriate contractual actions" to cancel the project. Navy leaders instead mandated yet another assessment of project, according to a memo seen by Reuters, leaving it in limbo, two sources said. Cheeseman's reason for trying to kill the project was his anger over a decision by DOGE earlier this year to cancel a $171 million contract for data services provider Pantheon Data that essentially duplicated parts of the HR project. In an email obtained by Reuters, he threatened to withhold funding from the Nakupuna-led project unless the Pantheon contract was restored. "I am beyond exasperated with how this happened," Cheeseman wrote in a May 7 email to Chief Information Officer Jane Rathbun about the contract cancellation, arguing the Pantheon contract was not "duplicative of any effort." "From where I sit, I'm content taking every dime away from NP2 in order to continue this effort," he added in the email. Cheeseman did not respond to a request for comment. Rathbun and Pantheon Data declined to comment. The pausing of NP2 was "unexpected, especially given that multiple comprehensive reviews validated the technical solution as the fastest and most affordable approach," Nakupuna said in a statement, adding it was disappointed by the change because the project was ready to deploy. The Navy said it "continues to prioritize essential personnel resources in support of efforts to strengthen military readiness through fiscal responsibility and departmental efficiency." (Reporting by Alexandra Alper, Additional Reporting by Mike Stone and Brad Heath; editing by Chris Sanders and Anna Driver)

How the unraveling of two Pentagon projects may result in a costly do-over

How the unraveling of two Pentagon projects may result in a costly do-over By Alexandra Alper WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Donald Trump's Navy ...
Fantasy football: Taylor Swift inspired team names for 2025New Foto - Fantasy football: Taylor Swift inspired team names for 2025

After a long offseason, football is back –fantasy football, that is. While teams battle through training camp and preseason action, we are left to fight battles on a different front. Those come in the form of fantasy drafts and, more importantly, choosing the right name for your squad this season. After all, you will have to look at it forever should your team be the last one standing. AsTaylor Swiftenters her third season as a big NFL fan, the demand for Swift-inspired names only continues to grow. For the Swifties just getting into the fantasy action – welcome aboard and don't let a fantasy championship only be reality in your wildest dreams. To let you focus on roster building, we'll ensure there's no blank space for your team name when entering draft night. Here are some fantasy football team names for 2025 that are inspired by the music superstar. Short, sweet and to the point, but just different enough from the overused "Jordan Love Story" that's run its course. You can blend theGreen Bay Packersquarterback's name with a bit of romance in what you hope will be a happy marriage between your team and the league's championship trophy at season's end. Finished last in your league last year and had to deal with a punishment that was either humiliating or borderline illegal? Shake it off! A lesser-known song in the Swift discography, this team name offers versatility to fit plenty of players while showcasing your Swiftie fandom. Ideally, this is what you'll want opponents saying every Sunday as theFalcons' receiver waltzes his way into the end zone. Tua Tagovailoa was made for this. Hopefully he'll stay healthy enough this season to keep this name relevant. Hey, punters are people too. Even defenses and kickers get in on the fun. Where's the love for the punters of the world? As we've established, punters are people too. However, until they enter the fantasy realm, it's hard to be excited when they appear on the field as your star player watches from the sideline. Why settle for naming your team after a player when you can just showcase your love of the game, or specifically, NFL RedZone? Sure, it's just the name of a song. However, it's the perfect fit for a team that continues to dominate the league each season and we can't let it slip by just because there isn't a pun. There's no way D'Andre Swift wasn't making this list. Sometimes you have to take the layups. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Fantasy football team names: Options inspired by Taylor Swift

Fantasy football: Taylor Swift inspired team names for 2025

Fantasy football: Taylor Swift inspired team names for 2025 After a long offseason, football is back –fantasy football, that is. While teams...
PSG set to meet Tottenham in UEFA Super CupNew Foto - PSG set to meet Tottenham in UEFA Super Cup

UDINE, Italy (AP) — Paris Saint-Germain get back on the hunt for trophies in the UEFA Super Cup against Tottenham on Wednesday. It's the annual early-season match between the winners of the Champions League and Europa League — and PSG starts as the big favorite. Coming off winning the treble, includingthe Champions Leaguefor the first time, the Qatari-backed team from the French capital will look to bounce back from losing to Chelsea in thefinal of the Club World Cupin the United States. Facing them at Stadio Friuli in Udine is another London club in Tottenham, which ended a 17-year wait for silverware bywinning the Europa Leagueby beating Manchester United in the final. Spurs have a new manager in Thomas Frank but also some big absentees, with attacking midfielders James Maddison and Dejan Kulusevski injured and long-time star Son Heung-min recently sold to LAFC. It is Tottenham's first appearance in the Super Cup. PSG has played in it once, losing 9-2 on aggregate to Juventus over two legs in 1996. PSG's players have just returned to training after the Club World Cup, which extended last season to mid-July. Tottenham should be more match-sharp, having played a raft of friendlies including against Arsenal and Bayern Munich. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

PSG set to meet Tottenham in UEFA Super Cup

PSG set to meet Tottenham in UEFA Super Cup UDINE, Italy (AP) — Paris Saint-Germain get back on the hunt for trophies in the UEFA Super Cup ...
DC Mayor Bowser changes her tone on Trump as crackdown ramps upNew Foto - DC Mayor Bowser changes her tone on Trump as crackdown ramps up

After Donald Trump won the presidential election, Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser flew to Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate to see him. When Republicans pressured her over the giant "Black Lives Matter" lettering she installed in front of the White House during Trump's first term, Bowser agreed to remove it. Her reasoning: The city had bigger fish to fry, particularly on managing the federal job cuts Trump has enacted this year. Now, as Trump federalizes the police in the capital and deploys the National Guard, Bowser faces perhaps the biggest test to date of her leadership and her ability to navigate the White House. Bowser's comments in response to the announcement illustrate how she's often trying to communicate multiple messages at one time. Describing Trump's executive action as "unsettling and unprecedented," Bowser on Monday blasted the city's lack of full autonomy without personalizing that frustration or criticizing Trump directly. "I can't say that given some of the rhetoric of the past that we're totally surprised," she said. Minutes later, she suggested the federal intervention may work to the city's benefit and told reporters she didn't have the legal authority to stop Trump's plans. "The fact that we have more law enforcement and presence in neighborhoods, that may be positive," she said. But Bowser struck a stronger tone during a virtual conversation with community leaders on Tuesday. Asked what residents can do, Bowser said, "This is a time where community needs to jump in and we all need to, to do what we can in our space, in our lane, to protect our city and to protect our autonomy, to protect our Home Rule, and get to the other side of this guy, and make sure we elect a Democratic House so that we have a backstop to this authoritarian push." By comparison, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Trump has no credibility in the law and order space. "The crime scene in D.C. most damaging to everyday Americans is at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave," Jeffriesposted, referencing the address of the White House. Other Democrats like Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, who dealt with Trump's deployment of the National Guard in her own city, also dismissed the president's actions. "To me, it just all boiled down to being a stunt and I just don't think you should use our troops for political stunts," said Bass. Christina Henderson, a member of the DC council, suggested she empathized with the difficult balance Bowser is trying to strike. She noted that only in 1973 did Congress allow DC residents to elect a mayor, council members and neighborhood commissioners, but prohibited the council from enacting certain laws and the city from having voting members in the US House or Senate. "You do not want to be the mayor that loses home rule and that there is no mayor after you," Henderson said. Asked if she planned to push back harder in the wake of an unprecedented undermining of her authority, Bowser said Monday, "My tenor will be appropriate for what I think is important for the district and what's important for the district is that we can take care of our citizens." Veteran city reporter Tom Sherwood, a political analyst for DC public radio station WAMU, says Bowser is trying to be strategic. "I believe that the mayor has done all she can do to tend to the weather-vane attitude of President Trump," Sherwood said. "The image from the president is that the district is a liberal, mostly Black city that doesn't care about fighting crime, and so that's left the mayor and the DC Council as prime targets for him." Anti-Trump sentiment is fierce in activist spaces across the city, which former Vice President Kamala Harris won last year with 90% of the vote. At a demonstration this week, the Free DC project, a movement grounded in demanding DC statehood, denounced the Trump administration's actions. Organizers accused Trump of trying to provoke violence and compared immigration arrests to kidnappings. "Black Washingtonians have long recognized that community violence cannot be solved through state violence," said Free DC's organizing director Nee Nee Taylor, questioning the effectiveness of policing over investing in social programs to uplift the most vulnerable. "We will not be idle as oppressors' structures try to harm our communities and take power," she added. When asked if she was disappointed Bowser was not mirroring the intense pushback as seen and heard from community members on city streets, Taylor said she thinks the mayor is doing all she can and that she is occupying a different role. "I think she's standing up to the best of her ability, being that DC is not a state," Taylor said. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

DC Mayor Bowser changes her tone on Trump as crackdown ramps up

DC Mayor Bowser changes her tone on Trump as crackdown ramps up After Donald Trump won the presidential election, Washington, D.C., Mayor Mu...

 

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