Herbivore dinosaurs’ food, new research


This May 2018 video says about itself:

Check out the largest herbivorous dinosaurs that ever lived! This top 10 list of plant eating dinosaurs has some of the biggest creatures that ever roamed the earth millions of years ago!

From the University of Leeds in England:

Growing a dinosaur’s dinner

July 13, 2018

Scientists have measured the nutritional value of herbivore dinosaurs‘ diet by growing their food in atmospheric conditions similar to those found roughly 150 million years ago.

Previously, many scientists believed that plants grown in an atmosphere with high carbon dioxide levels had low nutritional value. But a new experimental approach led by Dr Fiona Gill at the University of Leeds has shown this is not necessarily true.

The team grew dinosaur food plants, such as horsetail and ginkgo, under high levels of carbon dioxide mimicking atmospheric conditions similar to when sauropod dinosaurs, the largest animals ever to roam Earth, would have been widespread.

An artificial fermentation system was used to simulate digestion of the plant leaves in the sauropods‘ stomachs, allowing the researchers to determine the leaves’ nutritional value. The findings, published in Palaeontology, showed many of the plants had significantly higher energy and nutrient levels than previously believed.

This suggests that the megaherbivores would have needed to eat much less per day and the ecosystem could potentially have supported a significantly higher dinosaur population density, possibly as much as 20% greater than previously estimated.

Dr Gill, a palaeontologist and geochemist from the School of Earth and Environment at Leeds, said: “The climate was very different in the Mesozoic era — when the huge brachiosaurus and diplodocus lived — with possibly much higher carbon dioxide levels. There has been the assumption that as plants grow faster and/or bigger under higher CO2 levels, their nutritional value decreases. Our results show this isn’t the case for all plant species.

“The large body size of sauropods at that time would suggest they needed huge quantities of energy to sustain them. When the available food source has higher nutrient and energy levels it means less food needs to be consumed to provide sufficient energy, which in turn can affect population size and density.

“Our research doesn’t give the whole picture of dinosaur diet or cover the breadth of the plants that existed at this time, but a clearer understanding of how the dinosaurs ate can help scientists understand how they lived.”

“The exciting thing about our approach to growing plants in prehistoric atmospheric conditions is that it can used to simulate other ecosystems and diets of other ancient megaherbivores, such as Miocene mammals — the ancestors of many modern mammals.”

Emirates-USA torture in Yemen, Amnesty says


This video says about itself:

šŸ‡¾šŸ‡Ŗ Yemeni prisoners say UAE officers sexually torture them: AP | Al Jazeera English

20 June 2018

Seven former detainees of prisons run by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in Yemen have described what they call ”systematic sexual torture”.

They told the Associated Press they were raped and abused by Yemeni guards working under UAE officers. …

Al Jazeera’s Dayana Karim reports.

By Bill Van Auken in the USA:

UAE and US guilty of war crimes in Yemen torture centers, Amnesty charges

13 July 2018

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) and mercenary forces operating under its command have carried out widespread forced disappearances, torture and murder of Yemenis suspected of opposing the more than three-year-old intervention by the oil-rich Gulf state in alliance with Saudi Arabia and Washington.

This is the conclusion drawn by the human rights group Amnesty International after interviewing at least 75 people, including families of the disappeared and detained, survivors of the UAE torture centers, lawyers, journalists and local officials in Yemen.

Amnesty concentrated its investigation on 51 cases, typical of the untold hundreds if not thousands who have been swept up into the UAE detention and torture apparatus. Nineteen of these individuals remain missing, their whereabouts unknown to their families amid fears that some of them may have died in captivity.

The report outlines the stark political contradictions underlying the UAEā€™s repressive operations in Yemen. While intervening in the country as part of a Saudi-led coalition whose ostensible aim is the restoration to power of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, the Saudi puppet who was overthrown by Houthi rebels in January 2015, the UAE is clearly pursuing its own interests in the region.

ā€œThe UAE had been bypassing Hadi government officials in dealing with security issues, at times prompting President Hadi and his supporters to criticize the UAE for behaving like an occupierā€, the Amnesty report states.

This statement was substantiated on Monday when the ā€œinterior ministerā€ designated by President Hadi, who remains in self-imposed exile

Or: Saudi autocracy-imposed house arrest exile?

in Riyadh, held a meeting in the southern Yemeni port city of Aden with a top UAE official, calling on Abu Dhabi to shut down or hand over the prisons it runs in southern Yemen.

The UAE has been working in collaboration with southern secessionists, who oppose the re-imposition of Hadiā€™s rule over the region, as well as with a network of militias and mercenaries that it is arming and financing.

Its aim is to assert control over a series of bases bordering the strategic waterways linking the Red Sea with the Indian Ocean, most importantly the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, through which much of the Middle Eastā€™s oil bound for Asia is shipped.

To assert its control, the UAE has instituted a reign of terror in the areas of Yemen it has conquered. According to Amnesty: ā€œWitnesses described how detainees were dragged from places of work and on the street, in some cases they were beatenā€”at times to the point of bleeding or losing consciousnessā€”and companions threatened when they attempted to question the arrest. When a 37-year-old man was being arrested by the Security Belt while hanging out with friends near his house in Aden he was beaten up when he asked why he was being taken, his family said; a friend who stepped in to stop the beating was detained too.

ā€œIn cases where arrests happened at home, witnesses said security forces showed up in large numbers, barged in oftentimes late at night or around dawn, pointing guns at family members, using excessive force amid the screams of women and children. They dragged out individuals without showing warrants, explaining the reason of the arrest, or saying where they are taking those being arrested.ā€

Among those seized in this fashion have been suspected supporters of the Houthis as well as those of groups that fought against them, along with members of the local branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, journalists, civic leaders and those believed to be critical of UAE rule.

Those detained have been taken to a network of 18 secret prisons where, according to Amnesty, detainees report, ā€œbeing subjected to or witnessing torture and other ill-treatment, including sexual abuse, and the use of prolonged solitary confinement. Witnesses said, at times, detainees were filmed as they were being tortured, including while being tied, stripped naked, given electric shocks and beaten with canes and wires.ā€

The report quoted one detainee, held at a detention camp located at the UAE base in Bureiqa, Aden, who said he had been subjected to ā€œall sorts of tortureā€ by UAE troops there ā€œincluding by repeatedly inserting an object into his anus until he bled. He said he was kept in a hole in the ground with only his head above the surface for up to three days during which he was only given a small amount of water twice a day and left to defecate and urinate on himself in that position.ā€

The report also cited the exposure last month by the Associated Press of widespread sexual torture inside the UAEā€™s secret prisons. Detainees have been systematically raped by Yemeni guards acting under the orders of Emirati officers as other guards filmed these assaults for the purpose of blackmail.

Other regular practices have included electrocuting prisonersā€™ genitals, hanging rocks from their testicles and sodomizing them with wooden and steel poles.

ā€œThey strip you naked, then tie your hands to a steel pole from the right and the left so you are spread open in front of them. Then the sodomizing startsā€, a father of four told the AP.

An earlier AP report published last year quoted Pentagon officials as acknowledging that US military personnel ā€œparticipate in interrogations of detainees at locations in Yemen, provide questions for others to ask, and receive transcripts of interrogations from Emirati allies.ā€

The Pentagon has claimed that it has received no reports of torture or abuse, but prisoners have reported the presence of uniformed US military personnel at the torture centers. While they had not seen them participate directly in the abuse, they insisted that they had to have been aware of the torture, given the constant screaming and the condition of the detainees.

The UAE forces, moreover, consist in large measure of mercenaries, including former American military officers who have assumed senior command positions. A key role has been played in the organization of the UAE military by an Abu Dhabi-based firm called Reflex Responses Company, also known as R2, founded in 2010 by the politically connected military contractor Erik Prince, who formerly headed Blackwater, infamous for its massacres in Iraq.

Prince, whose sister Betsy Devos is Trumpā€™s education secretary, has overseen the hiring and training of mercenaries from Sudan, Colombia, South Africa and elsewhere, who have been deployed to Yemen.

The Amnesty report makes clear that the UAEā€™s arbitrary arrests, forced disappearances and wholesale torture, as well as the US complicity in these acts, constitute war crimes.

As horrific as they are, these crimes are only the tip of the iceberg of the atrocities unleashed against the people of Yemen in a war that has assumed near genocidal proportions. The war has left 600,000 civilians either dead or wounded, according to a statement issued by the Yemeni Ministry of Human Rights in March. It has left another 22.2 million Yemenis in need of food aid, and 8.4 million on the brink of famine.

Last month, the UAE, with Washingtonā€™s backing and military collaboration, launched a military siege of the Red Sea port city of Hodeidah, despite warnings from the UN that it could cost the lives of 250,000 civilians in the city itself, as well as millions more if the portā€”the lifeline for food and medicine for some 70 percent of the populationā€”were shut down.

Washington has backed the war, providing Saudi-led forces with the bombs and missiles that are killing Yemenis, supporting the blockade of the country with US warships, providing midair refueling for Saudi warplanes and operating a joint logistic center in Riyadh where targets are chosen.

Begun under the Obama administration, Washingtonā€™s support for massive war crimes is directed at countering Iranian influence in the region and furthering US hegemony, strategic aims for which US imperialism is prepared to sacrifice the lives of millions.

Flashlight fish, new research


This video says about itself:

The Flashlight Fish Anomalops katoptron Uses Bioluminescent Light to Detect Prey in the Dark

9 February 2017

To hunt in the dark, these fish bring their own ‘flashlights’.

Scientists just discovered a weird new fish and we canā€™t tell if itā€™s cool or terrifying or both.

From the Ruhr-University Bochum in Germany:

Light receptors determine the behavior of flashlight fish

July 12, 2018

Biologists at the Ruhr-UniversitƤt Bochum characterized new, unknown photoreceptors from the bioluminescent flashlight fish Anomalops katoptron. The photoreceptors known as opsins allow the fish to detect light with a specific wavelength. As published on the 11th July 2018 in PLOS ONE the scientists found new opsin variants, which are specialized to detect low intensity blue light in the wavelength range of bioluminescent light emitted by the fish. The blue light can be used to influence the fish behaviour.

The authors conclude that this specific blue light receptors and light processing is an evolutionary adaptation to the ecological environment of the fish. The study is an interdisciplinary biological approach combining the expertise of geneticist Dr Minou Nowrousian and Prof Dr Ulrich KĆ¼ck, molecular biologist Dr Melanie Mark, zoologists Dr Jens Hellinger and Dr Marcel Donner as well as physiologist and optogeneticist Prof Dr Stefan Herlitze.

Two opsin variants to detect blue light

Besides the fact that bioluminescence is a widespread phenomenon in marine environments it is currently not known how bioluminescence is processed and which physiological and behavioural consequences bioluminescence is evoking in most species. The flashlight fish Anomalops katoptron can be seen in shallow waters of coral reefs at moonless nights and is found during the day in caves up to 400 metres deep. Light organs are situated under the eye, which produce blue light with a wavelength of 490 nanometres, which is used to detect and hunt prey.

The research team analysed the photoreceptor composition of the retina and found two visual pigments, which resemble the visual pigments expressed in the mammalian retina. Both of these photoreceptors are activated by low intensity blue light in the range of 490 nanometres, which match the wavelength range of its own bioluminescent light.

Fish are conditioned during feeding

Next, the research team analysed if Anomalops katoptron uses blue light for behavioural responses. They performed a Pavlovian conditioning task with eight fish, where the fish had to associate feeding with a specific light pulse. “The fish were fed in darkness, but we used a strong red flashlight to illuminate the feeding area. We thought originally that the fish cannot see the red light”, says Jens Hellinger, “but found that they can associate the red light with food. Thus, once we switched on the red light at the corner of the aquarium, the fish swam into the light beam.”

The scientists used this phenomenon to perform a behavioural test, to show that flashlight fish would react only to specific wavelength of light. They used a much lower light intensity in comparison to the red flashlight and found that the fish now only reacted to low intensity blue but not red light.

Adaptation to star light and bioluminescence

“The visual system of flashlight fish seems to be adapted to detect low intensity light, such as star light or bioluminescent light to adjust their own behaviour”, concluded Stefan Herlitze. The low light detection reveals a new behavioural function of bioluminescence in fish.

Bioluminescence

Bioluminescence involves a chemical process where free energy is converted into light. The phenomenon is found in various different species from bacteria, fungi and insects to vertebrates. Bioluminescent light is often produced in specialized cell organelles or light organs. Light organs filled with symbiotic bacteria are for example often found in deep-sea fish to produce behaviour-relevant light signals.

Trump in Britain, a British view


This 12 July 2018 video from Britain is called Donald Trump says he feels ‘unwelcome’ in London due to protests.

From the the Socialist Equality Party (UK) today:

What does it really mean to ā€œStop Trump?ā€ The working class must be mobilised against capitalism and for socialism

Donald Trump richly deserves the outpouring of condemnation and political opposition that has led up to the series of UK-wide protests that began Thursday.

He represents all that is vile and reactionary in political and social life, not only in the United States but in Britain, Europe and throughout the world.

A billionaire advocate of cutting social spending and punishing working people to enrich the major corporations and the already fabulously wealthy.

Someone whose proudest boast is that he will ā€œBuild the Wallā€ and who now pens immigrant children in cages, separated from their mothers and fathers.

An advocate of an ā€œAmerica Firstā€ trade war that pits workers in one country against those in another in a vicious race to the bottom.

A brutal militarist who has threatened nuclear war against North Korea, Russia and China unless they accept US dictates.

These and innumerable lesser crimes are cited by the organisers of the anti-Trump protests to secure the support of those genuinely horrified that such a man leads the most powerful country in the world. …

And what if Hillary Clinton … had won against Trump in 2016? Not only has Clinton advocated for every war waged by the US since Iraq, but the favoured candidate of Wall Street also urged in 2014 that children from Central America entering the US illegally ā€œshould be sent back as soon as it can be determined who responsible adults in their families areā€ and who, in 2015, said, ā€œI voted numerous times when I was a senator to spend money to build a barrier to try to prevent illegal immigrants from coming in.ā€ …

not a word is said by the leaders of Together Against Trump against the EU and all its governmentsā€”a quarter of whose citizens are in poverty or at risk of poverty, whose ā€œFortress Europeā€ policies have led to the deaths of 35,000 migrants and whose governments are all frantically rearming.

Our comrades in the Socialist Equality Party in the US have insisted that the coming to power of Trump is not an aberration, but was prepared politically by previous administrations …

The extreme nationalist ā€œAmerica Firstā€ assertion of the interests of US imperialism is only the most developed expression of the growth of antagonisms between all the major imperialist powers that are driving the world ever more swiftly towards trade war and military conflict.

For this reason, no section of the ruling class in America, the UK or Europe represents a genuine alternative to Trump.

There are three basic forms of opposition to his administration, representing the interests of different social classes.

The opposition of the ruling class led by the Democrats in the US and American imperialismā€™s various rivals in Europe.

The opposition of affluent layers of the upper-middle class, who in Britain generally gravitate towards the EU as a counterweight to the US and a guarantor of the economic order on which their considerable privileges depend.

The opposition of the American, British and world working class: The hundreds of millions made to suffer through the destruction of their livelihoods by the major corporations, by governments who serve corporate interests and the financial oligarchy just as surely as does Trump, and by the brutal wars that have left such cruel scars on the face of the planet.

To oppose Trump is to oppose the capitalist system he defends. It means mobilising a unified struggle by workers and young people against US, British and European imperialism independently of all the political representatives of big business on a socialist and revolutionary programme and perspective.

Anti-Trump demonstrations today in Britain: here.

HUNDREDS of police officers have been made to sleep in ā€œunacceptableā€ conditions with no hot water or warm food after being drafted for security as US President Donald Trump arrives in Britai: here.

BABY TRUMP BLIMP TAKES FLIGHT London on Friday was awash with demonstrations against Trumpā€™s U.K. visit, including the flight over parliament square of a huge blimp depicting the president as a screaming baby. [HuffPost]

Puerto Rico’s forests and Hurricane Maria


This NASA video says about itself:

NASA Surveys Hurricane Damage to Puerto Ricoā€™s Forests

11 July 2018

From NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center in the USA:

NASA surveys hurricane damage to Puerto Rico’s forests

July 11, 2018

On Sept. 20, 2017, Hurricane Maria barreled across Puerto Rico with winds of up to 155 miles per hour and battering rain that flooded towns, knocked out communications networks and destroyed the power grid. In the rugged central mountains and the lush northeast, Maria unleashed its fury as fierce winds completely defoliated the tropical forests and broke and uprooted trees. Heavy rainfall triggered thousands of landslides that mowed over swaths of steep mountainsides.

In April a team of NASA scientists traveled to Puerto Rico with airborne instrumentation to survey damages from Hurricane Maria to the island’s forests.

“From the air, the scope of the hurricane’s damages was startling”, said NASA Earth scientist Bruce Cook, who led the campaign. “The dense, interlocking canopies that blanketed the island before the storm were reduced to a tangle of downed trees and isolated survivors, stripped of their branches.”

NASA’s Earth-observing satellites monitor the world’s forests to detect seasonal changes in vegetation cover or abrupt forest losses from deforestation, but at spatial and time scales that are too coarse to see changes. To get a more detailed look, NASA flew an airborne instrument called Goddard’s Lidar, Hyperspectral and Thermal Imager, or G-LiHT. From the belly of a small aircraft flying one thousand feet above the trees, G-LiHT collected multiple measurements of forests across the island, including high-resolution photographs, surface temperatures and the heights and structure of the vegetation.

The U.S. Forest Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and NASA provided funding for the airborne campaign.

The team flew many of the same tracks with G-LiHT as it had in the spring of 2017, months before Hurricane Maria made landfall, as part of a study of how tropical forests regrow on abandoned agricultural land. The before-and-after comparison shows forests across the island still reeling from the hurricane’s impact.

Using lidar, a ranging system that fires 600,000 laser pulses per second, the team measured changes in the height and structure of the Puerto Rican forests. The damage is palpable. Forests near the city of Arecibo on the northern side of the island grow on limestone hills with little soil to stabilize trees. As a result, the hurricane snapped or uprooted 60 percent of the trees there. In the northeast, on the slopes of El Yunque National Forest, the hurricane trimmed the forests, reducing their average height by one-third.

Data from G-LiHT is not only being used to capture the condition of the island’s forests; it is an important research tool for scientists who are tracking how the forests are changing as they recover from such a major event.

“[Hurricane] Maria pressed the reset button on many of the different processes that develop forests over time”, said Doug Morton, an Earth scientist at NASA’s Goddard Spaceflight Center and G-LiHT co-investigator. “Now we’re watching a lot of those processes in fast-forward speeds as large areas of the island are recovering, with surviving trees and new seedlings basking in full sunlight.”

Among the areas that the team flew over extensively was El Yunque National Forest, which Hurricane Maria struck at full force. The U.S. Forest Service manages El Yunque, a tropical rainforest, as well as its designated research plots, which were established in the late 1930s. University and government scientists perform all manner of research, including measuring individual trees to track their growth, counting flowers and seeds to monitor reproduction, and analyzing soil samples to track the nutrients needed for plant growth.

One important assessment of a tree’s health is its crown, which comprises the overall shape of a treetop, with its branches, stems and leaves. Hurricane winds can heavily damage tree crowns and drastically reduce the number of leaves for creating energy through photosynthesis.

“Just seven months after the storm, surviving trees are flushing new leaves and regrowing branches in order to regain their ability to harvest sunlight through photosynthesis”, Morton said, while also noting that the survival of damaged trees in the years ahead is an open question.

While it’s difficult to assess tree crowns in detail from the ground, from the air G-LiHT’s lidar instrument can derive the shape and structure of all of the trees in its flight path. The airborne campaign over Puerto Rico was extensive enough to provide information on the structure and composition of the overall forest canopy, opening up a range of research possibilities.

“Severe storms like Maria will favor some species and destroy others”, said Maria Uriarte, an ecologist at Columbia University who has studied El Yunque National Forest for 15 years and is working with the NASA team to validate flight data with ground observations. “Plot level studies tell us how this plays out in a small area but the damage at any particular place depends on proximity to the storm’s track, topography, soils and the characteristics of each forest patch. This makes it hard to generalize to other forests in the island.”

But with G-LiHT data scientists can study the storm impacts over a much larger area, Uriarte continued. “What’s really exciting is that we can ask a completely different set of questions,” she said. “Why does one area have more damage than others? What species are being affected the most across the island?”

Understanding the state of the forest canopy also has far-reaching implications for the rest of the ecosystem, as tree cover is critical to the survival of many species. For example, birds such as the native Iguaca parrot use the canopy to hide from predator hawks. The canopy also creates a cooler, humid environment that is conducive to the growth of tree seedlings and lizards and frogs that inhabit the forest floor. Streams that are cooled by the dense shade also make them habitable for a wide diversity of other organisms.

Yet by that same token, other plants and animals that were once at a disadvantage are now benefiting from changes brought about by the loss of canopy.

“Some lizards live in the canopy, where they thrive in drier, more sunlit conditions”, said herpetologist Neftali RĆ­os-LĆ³pez, an associate professor at the University of Puerto Rico-Humacao Campus. “Because of the hurricane those drier conditions that were once exclusive to the canopy are now extended down to the forest floor. As a result, those animals are better adapted to those conditions and have started displacing and substituting animals that are adapted to the once cooler conditions.”

“Who are the winners and losers in this new environment? That’s an important question in all of this”, said NASA’s Doug Morton. During the airborne campaign, he spent several days in the research plots of El Yunque taking three-dimensional images of the forest floor to complement the data from G-LiHT. He said it’s clear that the palms, which weathered the hurricane winds better than other broad-leafed trees, are among the current beneficiaries of the now sun-drenched forest. And that’s not a bad thing.

“Palm trees are going to form a major component of the canopy of this forest for the next decade or more, and in some ways they’ll help to facilitate the recovery of the rest of this forest”, Morton said. “Palms provide a little bit of shade and protection for the flora and fauna that are recolonizing the area. That’s encouraging.”

The implications of this research extend beyond the forest ecosystem, both in time and space, said Grizelle Gonzalez, a research ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service and project lead for the research plots in El Yunque. As an example, she pointed out that the hurricane caused the mountain streams to flood and fill with sediment that ultimately flowed into the ocean. Sediment can negatively impact the quality of the drinking water as well as the coral communities that fisheries depend on for both subsistence and commerce.

“It’s beautiful to see that so many federal agencies came together to collaborate on this important work because forests play a key role in everything from biodiversity and the economy to public health”, Gonzalez said.

G-LiHT data also has global implications. In July, the team heads to Alaska to continue surveying the vast forestland in the state’s interior to better understand the impacts of accelerated Arctic warming on boreal forests, which, in turn, play a key role in cooling Earth’s climate by sequestering carbon from the atmosphere. “G-LiHT allows us to collect research data at the scale of individual trees across broad landscapes,” Morton said. “Forests from Alaska to Puerto Rico are constantly changing in response to climate warming and disturbances such as fire and hurricanes.”

Hurricane Maria gave ecologists rare chance to study how tropical dry forests recover: here.

Scientist Brad Lister returned to Puerto Rican rainforest after 35 years to find 98 percent of ground insects had vanished. ā€œWe are essentially destroying the very life support systems that allow us to sustain our existence on the planet,ā€ he said.

Global warming will increase the severity of hurricanes: here.

TRUMP PRAISES MARIA RESPONSE DESPITE HUGE DEATH TOLL Trump praised his administration for its controversial response to Hurricane Maria, calling it ā€œan incredible unsung success.ā€ Puerto Rican authorities recently increased the death toll linked to the storm from 64 to 2,975. [HuffPost]

Trump advocates racism, Johnson as British prime minister, to Murdoch daily


Melania Trump, Donald Trump, Theresa May and her husband before the Blenheim palace gala dinner, AFP photo

Translated from Dutch NOS TV today:

The British Prime Minister May, with her proposals this week, has thrown out the chance of a Brexit favorable to the British. Therefore, a new free trade agreement between the US and the United Kingdom will no longer happen. Former Foreign Minister Boris Johnson would be a good prime minister. And British culture disappears due to immigrants.

US President Trump made a series of remarkable statements at the beginning of his visit to Britain in an interview with the [Rupert Murdoch owned] British tabloid The Sun

On Thursday evening, Prime Minister May gave the president a gala dinner at Blenheim Palace, where Winston Churchill was born.

A dinner where several British Big Business fat cats were present as well.

But while the dining was still going on, The Sun published the conversation with Trump at the American embassy in Brussels. In an audio recording he explains that he tried to advise May, but that she has ignored his advice. …

Trump goes on to say that he thinks that ex-Foreign Minister Boris Johnson, a political rival of May, who resigned this week, would be a good prime minister. “He would be a great prime minister, heā€™s got what it takes.” …

Furthermore, Trump calls immigration in Europe “a shame”. “I think allowing millions and millions of people to come into Europe is very, very sad. What has happened to Europe is a shame. Allowing the immigration to take place in Europe is a shame. I think it changed the fabric of Europe and, unless you act very quickly, itā€™s never going to be what it was and I donā€™t mean that in a positive way.”

“I think you are losing your culture. Look around. You go through certain areas that didnā€™t exist ten or 15 years ago”

For Trump, the fight against immigration in his own country is high on the agenda: this is why border guards act harshly against illegal immigrants. A policy in which sometimes very young children were separated from their parents, he had to rescind it after a storm of criticism at home and abroad.

Trump also attacked London Mayor Khan because of immigration: according to Trump, he is guilty of the terrorist attacks in the capital, because he has admitted so many immigrants to London. The Sun quotes a source from the Khan administration pointing out in a reaction that [Theresa May‘s, later Conservative party colleague Amber Rudd‘s] Home Office decides about immigration, not the municipalities. …

Trump will be having lunch with Prime Minister May at her Checkers estate, about 60 miles outside London, and will meet Queen Elisabeth at Windsor Castle, which is also outside London. Later he will travel to Scotland, where he owns several golf resorts.

US President Donald Trump arrived in the UK intent on exploiting the raging crisis of the Conservative government of Prime Minister Theresa May over Brexit to assert US imperialismā€™s interests in Europe: here.

UK Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt completed a three-day visit to the United States Thursday. Hunt gave his first major foreign policy speech and met Trump administration officials, but also utilised the trip to deliver an unprecedented endorsement of Boris Johnson, who he replaced as foreign secretary, as a potential ā€œgreatā€ replacement for beleaguered Prime Minister Theresa May: here.

MEXICO: WE WONā€™T TAKE ASYLUM-SEEKERS Mexico is opposed to a U.S. request to make people seeking asylum in the U.S. apply in Mexico instead. [Reuters]

OMAROSA SAYS TRUMP ā€˜WANTS TO START A RACE WARā€™ Former White House aide Omarosa Manigault-Newman used an interview with Al Sharpton to tear into Trump, calling him a racist who ā€œwants to start a race war.ā€ [HuffPost]

WHITE NATIONALIST ATTENDS KUDLOWā€™S BIRTHDAY The publisher of a white nationalist, anti-immigration website was a guest in the home of Trumpā€™s top economic adviser, Larry Kudlow. [HuffPost]