Python Notes for Professionals downalod 



Python is an interpreted, high-level general-purpose programming language. Its design philosophy emphasizes the readability of the code with its use of large indents. Its language constructs as well as its object-oriented approach are intended to help programmers write clear logical code for small and large scale projects.


Python is dynamically typed and garbage collected. It supports multiple programming paradigms, including structured (particularly procedural), object-oriented, and functional programming. It is often described as a "battery-included" language due to its extensive standard library.


Guido van Rossum began working on Python in the late 1980s, succeeding the ABC programming language, and first released it in 1991 as Python 0.9.0. Python 2.0 was released in 2000 and introduced new features, such as comprehensive lists and a garbage collection system with reference arithmetic. Python 3.0 was released in 2008 and was a major revision to a language that was not fully backward compatible. Python 2 was discontinued with version 2.7.18 in 2020.


Python consistently ranks as one of the most popular programming languages

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Hacking: The Art of Exploitation is a book by John "Smips" Erickson on computer and network security. [1] [2] It was published by No Starch Press in 2003, with a second edition in 2008. All examples in the book were developed, compiled, and tested on Gentoo Linux.



Author information and history
John Erickson is a computer security expert with a background in computer science. Since 2011, he has worked as a vulnerability researcher and computer security specialist in California.

A Starter CD is included with the book which provides a Linux-based programming and debugging environment for users.

Contents of the first edition
The content of the operation evolves between programming, networking and coding. The book does not use any appreciable scale for real world examples; Discussions about specific worms and exploits rarely provoke.

Programming
The computer programming part of the hack takes up more than half of the book. This section deals with developing, designing, building, and testing operating code, and therefore includes basic assembly programming. Attacks proven to range from simple stack buffer overflows to sophisticated techniques that include global shift table overwriting.

While Ericsson discusses countermeasures such as the runnable stack and how to dodge them with libc kickback attacks, it does not delve into things without known vulnerabilities such as address space layout randomization. . The book also does not cover Openwall, GrSecurity, PaX projects or kernel exploits.

Networks
The Network section in Hacking explains the basics of the OSI model and basic networking concepts, including packet sniffing, connection hijacking, denial of service, and port scanning.

cryptology
The Hack Cryptography section covers basic information theory, as well as symmetric and asymmetric encryption. He ends up cracking the WEP using a Fluhrer, Mantin and Shamir attack. Besides the basics, including man-in-the-middle attacks, dictionary attacks, and using John the Ripper; Hacking discusses Quantum Key Distribution, Love Grover's Quantum Search Algorithm, and Peter Shore's Quantum Analysis Algorithm for Breaking RSA Ciphers Using a Very Large Quantum Computer.

Other details
Hack coverage is the full cycle, from reverse engineering to executing the attack, to developing a vulnerability for a program that dies due to a buffer overflow via long command line arguments .

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 Hundreds march through Chicago to protest police shooting at 13-year-old Adam Toledo

The boy was killed in March after a police chase in the small village of Chicago.



CHICAGO - Hundreds of people protested Friday night in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood, demanding reforms from the city's police department after 13-year-old Adam Toledo was shot and killed by a police officer in March.


Large crowds listened to banners labeled "Justicia Para Adam" and "We are Adam, stop the police", as speakers denounced the Chicago Police Department and Mayor Lori Lightfoot.


Adam was shot and killed by police officer Eric E. Stillman, 34, in the early morning hours of March 29. In a video clip of the shooting, released Thursday by an independent municipal agency investigating police behavior, Adam Zuqaq is chased by a white policeman who orders him to stop and shows him his hands. Analysis of the video, the slowest event in a second, which then shows the boy throwing a pistol nearby and raising his hands in the air, before the officer shoots him in Chest.


Yasmine Cardenas, who attended the march with her two young children, cried while holding a sign supporting Adam and his family. She lives in Little Village, the predominantly Latino neighborhood where Adam was killed, and she runs an after-school arts program that worked with children at Gary Elementary School, where Adam was a student.

She said the neighborhood is sorely lacking in services for children and teens, and it needs school nurses and more technical programs to keep young people busy.

Trump entre dans la dernière semaine en tant que président avec peu d'alliés, pas de Twitter et des efforts pour le destituer.

Trump doit apparaître en public mardi lorsqu'il se rendra à la frontière du Texas.


WASHINGTON - Le président Donald Trump apparaîtra en public mardi lors d'une visite dans une partie du mur frontalier du Texas, lui offrant ce qui pourrait être l'une de ses premières opportunités de parler au public américain depuis qu'il a perdu son orateur sur les réseaux sociaux.


Au cours du week-end suivant les émeutes du Capitole qu'il a incitées, Trump est resté silencieux à l'intérieur de la Maison Blanche au milieu de la tourmente, exacerbée par le départ du personnel, les décisions prises à son sujet et son emploi du temps ayant ensuite été annulées.


Les derniers jours de sa présidence pourraient devenir les plus déterminants, alors que Trump se sépare de son allié le plus fidèle à Washington et doit à nouveau faire face à des responsabilités.


Trump reste provocant, selon deux sources proches de sa pensée. Il n'a pas l'intention de démissionner malgré les appels bipartisistes pour qu'il quitte ses fonctions avant la fin de son mandat le 20 janvier, et il a également indiqué qu'il pensait que ses partisans seraient irrités par la décision de Twitter et d'autres entreprises technologiques de le bloquer. Pour ceux à qui il parle, il continue de prétendre à tort qu'il a remporté l'élection


Un responsable de la Maison Blanche a déclaré lundi matin qu'il y avait des discussions sur la tenue d'un événement public plus tard dans la journée, mais à midi, il n'était pas clair si cela se produirait.




Un Marine était stationné à l'extérieur de l'aile ouest lundi matin, souvent pour indiquer que le président avait quitté le QG alors qu'il était dans le bureau ovale. Il devait recevoir la Médaille présidentielle de la liberté, considérée comme un grand honneur, lors d'une cérémonie spéciale lundi.


Un nombre croissant de ses alliés l'ont auparavant réprimandé publiquement ou l'ont évité secrètement au cours du week-end, et il n'a pas été en mesure de répondre sur Twitter après l'avoir interdit vendredi.


C'est une fin dramatique mais sans surprise à la présidence Trump après quatre ans de querelles quasi quotidiennes qui ont mis à l'épreuve les barrières de la démocratie et abouti à une attaque meurtrière contre le Capitole alors qu'un groupe pro-Trump tentait de renverser les résultats des élections. Mais c'est une tournure dramatique des événements pour un homme qui était considéré comme la personne la plus puissante du Parti républicain il y a une semaine et un candidat potentiel en 2024.

 


 Calls are growing in parts of the Muslim world to boycott French goods in protest against President Emmanuel Macron's public defending of the Prophet Muhammad's caricatures, which are blasphemous to Islam.

Macron's comments came last week in honor of murdered high school teacher Samuel Patty, who was beheaded earlier this month during a terrorist attack in a northern suburb of Paris.

Patty is murdered after showing a cartoon of the Prophet during a class on freedom of expression.

Macron said France would not "give up" on the cartoons and pledged to confront Islamic extremists in the country, which sparked demonstrations and led to a boycott of Muslim-majority countries.

"I invite people, do not approach French goods and do not buy them," Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday during a speech in the capital, Ankara. European leaders should say "stop" to Macron and his hate campaign.


In Kuwait, a nongovernmental hypermarket chain said that more than 50 of its outlets are planning to boycott French products. A boycott campaign is also under way in Jordan, where some grocery stores have posted signs declaring that they do not sell French goods.

There are a handful of stores in Qatar that do the same thing, including the Al Meera supermarket chain, which has more than 50 branches in the Arab country. Qatar University also said it is postponing its French Cultural Week indefinitely.

The killing of Patty has reignited tensions over secularism, Islamism and Islamophobia in France, but public anger in Muslim countries over Macron's handling of the attack threatens to make it a diplomatic and economic issue as well.

In a statement issued on Sunday, the French Foreign Ministry described the boycott of its products as "unjustified", and demanded "to stop them immediately."

The ministry said that the reaction distorted the president's statements for political purposes, and that "the positions that France defended in favor of freedom of belief, freedom of expression, freedom of religion and rejecting any call for hatred."

The statement added that Macron's policies were aimed at "fighting radical Islam and fighting the Muslims of France, who are an integral part of society, history and the French Republic."

A teacher is beheaded, and France's war on secularism, freedom of expression and religious equality begins again

"We will never give up," Macron said on Twitter on Sunday. "We respect all differences with a spirit of peace. We do not accept hate speech and advocate reasonable debate. We will always be on the side of human dignity and universal values."

Patty's death sparked a security crackdown in France, with officials targeting hate speech on social media and nonprofits with potential links to Islamism.

The caricature Muhammad used by Patti in his class originally appeared in Charlie Hebdo and was cited as the motivation for a terrorist attack on the satirical magazine in 2015 that left 12 people dead. Macron vehemently defended the right to exhibit such cartoons in France at Patti's memorial service.

The French president said France will continue "loving discussions and reasonable arguments, and we will love science and its differences." We will not give up cartoons and drawings even if others decline.

Jordan, Pakistan, Egypt and Iran are among the Muslim countries that have condemned France for publishing the cartoons, and Macron responded.

"We condemn the publication of satirical cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad," Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi wrote on Twitter on Saturday.

Pakistani leader Imran Khan, the highest religious authority in Egypt, the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar, and the Iranian Foreign Ministry, also criticized France.

But fellow European leaders have spoken of their support for Macron, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose spokesperson quickly denounced Erdogan's comments on Monday.

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said Berlin stands in solidarity with Paris. The leaders of Greece and Austria also expressed their support for Macron.

                 Eddie Van Hallen has died aged 65 after battle with cancer

And at Eddie Van Hallen, the famous guitarist of the famous rock band Van Halen, according to what his son posted on social media, he was 65 years old.


“He was the best dad I could ever ask for,” his son, Wolf Van Hallen, wrote in a Twitter post. "Every moment I shared with him on and off stage was a gift."

Wolf Van Hallen, son of Eddie and Valerie Bertinelli said his father passed away after a "long, hard battle with cancer" on Tuesday morning. Van Halen then married actress Janie Lyzewski in 2009.

"My heart is broken and I don't think I will fully recover from this loss," he added.

Eddie Van Hallen, whose full name is Edward Ludiwijk Van Hallen, and his brother Alex Van Hallen started performing together as a teenager, but they formed the core of what would become Van Hallen after meeting David Lee Roth. .

In four decades, Van Hallen has released over a dozen albums together.

Van Hallen's guitar charm has anchored the group through four tumultuous decades of platinum albums, and the tours and revolving door have sold out to lead vocalists, from David Lee Roth to Sami Hajar to Gary Chiron and back to Hajar and Ruth.

His solos rose to the top like lightning and performed all of the band's iconic songs: "Runnin 'With the Devil", "Panama", "Hot For Teacher" and "Why Can't This Be Love?" And of course "Jump" - their first song - topped the pop singles charts in 1984.

Van Hallen is also famous for loaning his guitar tracks to Michael Jackson for "Beat It", the 1983 hit track from the historic "Thriller" album which mixed Jackson's silk pop with a stronger rock side.

Speaking to CNN in 2017 after making a charitable contribution to help raise funds for music programs in schools, the Rock & Roll Hall of Famer highlighted the role music played in its history.

“My whole life has been music,” CNN's John Voss said. "I couldn't imagine anything else."

When news of Van Halen's death broke, his friends and fellow musicians praised this unique talent.

“Eddie was not just a guitar god, but a very beautiful soul,” Case's Gene Simmons wrote on Twitter.

Gezer Butler of Black Sabbath described Van Halen as "one of the most beautiful men on earth that I have met and wandered around with."

"A real man and a real genius," he wrote on Twitter.

On Facebook, Ted Nugent said, "Thank you Eddie for enriching and energizing our lives with your wonderful gifts and vision. Pass my friend. Keep going.

 No patient was affected, but the incident was another reminder of the risks in increasingly common attacks on computer networks.


IQVIA, the contract research organization that helps manage AstraZeneca's Covid-19 vaccine trial, has been one of the victims of the ransomware attack.

IQVIA, the contract research organization that helps manage AstraZeneca's Covid-19 vaccine trial, has been one of the victims of the ransomware attack. Credit ... Kristoffer Tripplaar / Sipa, via Associated Press

Nicole Burleroth

Written by Nicole Burleroth

October 3, 2020


The Philadelphia company that sells software used in hundreds of clinical trials, including massive efforts to develop tests, treatments and a vaccine for the Coronavirus, has come under attack from ransomware that has slowed some of those trials over the past two weeks.

The previously unreported attack on eResearchTechnology began two weeks ago when employees discovered that they had been prevented from accessing their data by ransomware, an attack that holds victims' data hostage until they pay to unlock it. ERT said clinical trial patients were never at risk, but clients said the attack forced experimental researchers to track their patients with pen and paper.

Among those affected were IQVIA, a contract research organization that helps manage AstraZeneca's Covid vaccine trial, and Bristol-Myers Squibb, the pharmaceutical company that is leading a group of companies to develop a rapid test for the virus.


ERT does not say how many clinical trials have been affected, but its software is being used in drug trials across Europe, Asia and North America. It was used in three-quarters of the trials that led to the drugs being approved by the Food and Drug Administration last year, according to its website.

On Friday, ERT's vice president of marketing, Drew Bustos, confirmed that ransomware had taken over its systems on September 20. As a precaution, Mr. Bustos said, the company shut down its systems that day, called in outside cybersecurity experts and reported to the FBI.

“Nobody feels good about these experiences, but it has been contained,” said Mr. Bustos. He added that ERT started restarting its systems on Friday and plans to restart the remaining systems in the coming days.

Mr. Bustos said it was still too early to say who was behind the attack. He declined to say whether the company paid the extortionists, as many companies affected by ransomware do now.

The attack on ERT comes after another major ransomware attack last weekend on Universal Health Services, a major hospital chain with more than 400 locations, many of them in the United States.

NBC News first reported the attack on UHS on Monday, saying it appeared to be "one of the largest medical cyberattacks in US history".

These incidents came on the heels of more than a thousand ransomware attacks on US cities, counties and hospitals during the past eighteen months. The attacks, which have been treated as a nuisance, have become more urgent in recent weeks as US officials fear that they may interfere, directly or indirectly, in the November elections.

A ransomware attack in Germany resulted in the first known death from a cyberattack in recent weeks, after Russian hackers seized 30 servers at a University Hospital in Düsseldorf, crashing systems and forcing the hospital to turn away emergency patients. As a result, German authorities said, a woman in a life-threatening condition was sent to a hospital 20 miles away in Wuppertal and died from late treatment.

One ERT customer, IQVIA, said he managed to reduce issues as he backed up his data. Bristol-Myers Squibb also said that the impact of the attack was limited, but other ERT clients had to transfer their clinical trials to pen and paper.

In a statement, IQVIA said the attack "had a limited impact on our clinical trial processes," and added, "We are not aware of any confidential data or patient information, related to our clinical trial activities, that has been removed, hacked or stolen."

Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson, two companies working on a coronavirus vaccine, said their coronavirus vaccine trials were unaffected.

Amy Rose, a spokeswoman for Pfizer, said: "ERT is not a provider of technology or is otherwise involved in clinical trials of the Pfizer's Phase 1/2/3 Covid-19 vaccine."

Companies and research laboratories on the front lines of the pandemic have been frequent targets of foreign hackers over the past seven months, as countries around the world try to gauge each other's reactions and progress in tackling the virus. In May, the F.B.I. The Department of Homeland Security warned that Chinese government spies were actively trying to steal US clinical research through electronic theft.

"The healthcare, pharmaceutical and research sectors working on the response to Covid-19 must realize that they are the primary targets of this activity and take the necessary steps to protect their systems," the agencies said.

More than a dozen countries have redeployed military and intelligence infiltrators to gather what they can on other countries' reactions, according to security researchers.

Even countries that did not previously stand out for their cyber prowess, such as South Korea and Vietnam, have been categorized in recent security reports as countries involved in penetrating global health organizations in the pandemic.

 



Trump's positive Covid test was a surprise many saw as coming
The president has been arrogant throughout the coronavirus pandemic. Now, a month before the election

It will likely be considered the biggest "October surprise" in US presidential election history. However, anyone who was attentive could see that coming.

Donald Trump tested positive for the Corona virus after he claimed that it would "disappear", and told journalist Bob Woodward that he deliberately underestimated this, failed to develop a national testing strategy, refused to wear face masks for several months, and put forward the idea of ​​injecting patients. Bleaching, insisting at one of his many crowded rallies that it "affects almost no one", and in a debate on Tuesday, mocked his rival Joe Biden: "He could speak 200 feet away and appear with the largest mask I've ever seen."

It has inspired an indomitable sensation even with the deaths of over 200,000 Americans. But now the chickens are back home to roost, just as they did with the arrogant British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, and the Brazilian President, Jair Bolsonaro. Covid-19, which Trump has described as the "invisible enemy," has infiltrated the Oval Office.


Donald Trump Tests Positive For Covid And Enters Quarantine - Live Updates


 Read more:

Thirty-two days before the election often described as the most important in living memory, this changes everything. Trump was doing what he liked the most, holding his campaign rallies, on a hectic schedule in recent weeks, in an effort to recreate the remarkable magic of 2016. Any more rallies or flights on Air Force One for that matter, is now out of the question. In quarantine. If Trump loses the election, he may not hold a rally again.


There is also a huge question mark remaining over the second presidential debate, scheduled for October 15th. Maybe Trump, if he's good enough, can really get involved. Perhaps after what happened on Tuesday, any discussion will not be a mercy for everyone.


How will this play politically? If Trump is asymptomatic, there is a risk that he may once again seek to reduce the virus, and present the issue to his supporters: What's all the fuss about? But if he becomes seriously ill, he may benefit from the wave of popular sympathy, just as Johnson did.


Dr Finn Gupta, MSNBC pulmonologist and medical contributor, told the network: “Tonight's presidential race has fundamentally changed. There should be no more personal gatherings during the remainder of this season and I think there is a concern here, if the president stays without Symptoms, he may use it to reduce the risk of infection. "


He added, "They were making fun of masks in some cases. The fact that this happened even is a damning indictment, and unfortunately, kind of a" fact that we told you - like this "based on months and months of misrepresenting good public health practices. That was possible.

“It didn't have to happen if they were practicing the proper procedures and they didn't go to these gatherings and they had these chaotic events where, of course, airborne exposure was going to happen, even if it was outdoors. No concealment, no distancing, what would they expect that to be. Happen or occur? "

The revelation of the injury of Trump and his wife, Melania, raised concerns about Biden, who joined the president in the debate stage on Tuesday, although they did not shake hands. Not many of Trump's entourage were wearing masks in the auditorium. Hop Hicks, Trump's top aide, was present. Given all their travels, it's a contact tracing nightmare.

But Trump's critics will have to be careful to avoid some tripwires. Any euphoria or ill-wishership for Trump and Melania will be taken advantage of by Republicans as a sign of ruthlessness and political opportunism.


Trump's most recent major resignations and dismissals

 Read more:

Miles Taylor, the former Chief of Staff at the Department of Homeland Security and now a critic of Trump, tweeted: “We should all hope for our president and first lady to recover. But this is also a serious national security concern - and a disturbing consequence of the White House’s lenient approach to this deadly pandemic.”

Trump, who is 74 and overweight, is in the high risk category. The White House doctor said Friday that Trump is healthy enough to continue his duties. However, Covid-19 poses the biggest risk to the health of a US president since Ronald Reagan was shot outside a Washington hotel nearly four decades ago.

If Trump becomes seriously ill and unable to function, Vice President Mike Pence will take charge, following the procedures set out in the 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. But if Pence gets sick as well - unclear if his Covid-19 status is known - a constitutional crisis looms.

Under the rules of the Presidential Succession Act of 1947, the presidency must pass to the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi. But this means switching from a republican to a democratic leader. The Washington Post noted earlier this year: "Any effort to transfer power from Trump and Pence to Pelosi would surely inspire legal and political challenges, adding to chaos at the moment when the nation desperately needs stability."

As president, Trump had a duty to keep Americans safe. In the end, he couldn't keep it safe. As the infamous said, this is what it is....

 

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Not even 20% of Americans are willing to take the COVID-19 vaccine if President Donald Trump says it is safe.


A new Axios-Ipsos poll, published on Tuesday, shows that only 19% of Americans would be severely or somewhat likely to get a coronavirus vaccine if Trump pledges its safety. However, the majority of respondents (62 percent) said they would receive the vaccine if their doctor said it was safe, while 56 percent said they would do so if the cost was fully covered by health insurance.


Trump's critics have repeatedly raised concerns that the president is trying to politicize the vaccine development process in hopes of gaining approval before the November 3 elections. Although the president has said several times that he believes a vaccine may be ready by the end of October, top health officials in his administration have said that the candidate will likely be approved by the end of November or late December. Meanwhile, government regulators and drug companies that develop vaccines have come out with data assuring the public that they will be guided by science only and release a safe vaccine.

The new poll shows that confidence in the White House and the president is extremely low when it comes to providing accurate information about the ongoing pandemic. Only 9 percent of respondents said they had a "significant amount" of confidence in Trump, while only 6 percent said the same for the White House as an institution. Another 18 percent said they had a "fair amount" of confidence in Trump, bringing the total who said they trust the president to just 27 percent. Public confidence in the White House was slightly higher, at 28%.

Conversely, nearly half of respondents (47 percent) said they trusted Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden to provide them with accurate information about the coronavirus outbreak. More than half (53 percent) said they still had confidence that their state government would look out for their best interests, while 62 percent said the same to the Food and Drug Administration, which would need to approve a vaccine.

Despite weak confidence in Trump and the White House to obtain accurate information about the virus outbreak, the president's overall approval rate appears to be relatively stable. According to the FiveThirtyEight average of national polls, about 43.7% of Americans agree with Trump, while 52.5% oppose him. The president's approval rating has hovered around 40 percent since taking office in 2017.


 At a White House press conference on Wednesday, Donald Trump refused to commit to a peaceful handover of power if his rival, Joe Biden, wins the presidential election. But does he have the right? JDD shows you the question.


"Are you committed to the peaceful transfer of power?" The question already posed to the president of the United States is out of the ordinary. The answer is more: "We have to see what happens." With this announcement, Donald Trump continues to pave the way in the event of defeat in the November 3 election. For several months, the President of the United States, behind the polls, had been constantly raising the threat that he would not know the poll results.



But other than words, does the president of the United States really have the right to oppose a peaceful transfer of power? On a larger scale, can Donald Trump question the election results if Joe Biden wins?


Peaceful transfer of power, one of the pillars of American democracy

Under the Twentieth Amendment to the United States Constitution, the new president's term does not begin until eleven weeks in transition. A period that allows the old administration to coordinate with the new administration - if the outgoing president does not run for re-election or if he loses the election. This stage ends on January 20, during inauguration day. The outgoing president receives the newcomer to the White House, during a long interview whose exchanges were traditionally polite.


“The transfer of power is one of the primary rituals that ensure the stability of the republic,” emphasizes Nicole Bacharan, a US political scientist. It has always happened peacefully, whether during the Civil War or in 1992, when Bill Clinton’s victory caused a terrible shock to the Republican camp. ". Hence the anger that Donald Trump's statements sparked, even among his ranks.


Republican Senator Mitt Romney said on Twitter: "The peaceful transfer of power is fundamental to our democracy [...]. Any suggestion by a president that he can evade this constitutional guarantee is out of the question and unacceptable." She criticizes Donald Trump regularly.


Can Trump question the results?

“On the 3rd of November, it is not impossible to declare Trump a victory, because we will only get out of the polls,” Nicole Bacharan says. Only on the evening of the same day will states begin counting votes by correspondence, which can last more than a week. "The result is reversible. And there, Trump will yell about fraud." And this has actually appeared in the past, during the 2000 presidential election.


Democratic candidate Al Gore ran in an election in Florida where George W. Bush was recognized as the winner with very few votes in advance. The Florida Supreme Court accepted for the first time, the United States Supreme Court discontinued recount on the grounds that deadlines set by the Constitution could not be respected. "In 2000, the focus was on Florida. This year, it would be the same, but countless dimension," explains the historian. "There could be treatments in all 50 states."


Supreme Court: The cornerstone of Trump's victory?:

Appeals can be filed at the city, county, and state levels. Initially, the dispute will be settled by the local courts, as the presidential election is a federal matter. Then it can pass through federal courts, federal courts of appeals, all the way to the Supreme Court of the United States.


Hence, Donald Trump was keen to appoint a judge this weekend, to replace progressive judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died last Friday. If the Senate approves the candidate, the Supreme Court will become a conservative majority. The political expert specializing in the United States concludes that "it can prove the correctness of the accounts in a situation in the interest of Trump, or on the contrary invalidate them if they are not favorable to him."


The political weight of the postal vote:

As the presidential election approaches, Donald Trump has repeatedly mentioned the idea of ​​not recognizing the election results. He made the same threat in the 2016 ballot, which he ultimately won against Hillary Clinton. "This time, he has another angle to attack: the postal votes are rigged," says Nicole Bacharan.


The president regularly claims voting by mail is a potential source of fraud. He said at the same press conference, "Let's get rid of these publications, and the situation will be very peaceful and there will be no really transmission, it will be a continuation."


But his aversion to these posts could be explained by a completely different reason. Anne Dessin, professor emeritus at the University of Paris Nanterre, confirmed in the JDD, "Donald Trump is convinced, which has not been fully proven, that voting by mail would be in the interest of Republicans." According to press inquiries, postcards are used by 70% of Democratic voters and 20% of Republican voters. This voting method will be used more this year due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

                     What the student organizer says "Can't you see Republicans attack others?
 

A powerful pro-Trump crowd gathered in a Chicago suburb north of Chicago on Friday after an anti-Trump show criticizing the president's handling of the coronavirus at a busy downtown intersection.

"We were only expecting 15 people to show up," organizer Peter C., a high school student in Northbrook, Illinois, told Fox News. "We have much more than 15."


The crowd objected to the so-called "Coronavirus Death Scoreboard," which was unveiled at a public park in Northbrook. The banner, organized by liberal activist Lee Goodman of Peaceful Societies, shows the total death toll in the United States from the pandemic and reads "We are number 1."


"We were only expecting 15 people. We have more than 15."


Also include the name of President Trump below. The program was repeatedly vandalized and provoked polarizing reactions among the population.


Coronavirus Death Registry Board Has Been Vandalized, City of ILLINOIS Decided Not to Remove Anti-Trump Bid

While informal gatherings protested the banner throughout the week before Peter C.'s protest on Friday.


At least 50 pro-Trump protesters proudly waved flags and banners supporting the president in a city considered completely liberal.


A much smaller group of anti-Trump protesters gathered across the street. Several passing cars were released in support of President Trump, some even waving their Trump banners from their cars.


Some people booed the pro-Trump crowd. A young woman yelled, "Fuck you!" She held up her middle finger as she blew up the 2016 song "FDT (F --- Donald Trump)" by rapper YG & Nipsey Hussle from her car stereo.


When the Coronavirus banner ignited a political storm, Peter insisted that his rally went far beyond the protest against the anti-Trump parade.


'Coronavirus Death Registration Board' Screen Generates Controversy in Illinois

"We are here to protest the reopening of our schools and our educational system and the funding of our police," Peter, a junior and director of his high school's conservative Instagram page, told Fox News. "You don't see Republicans attacking other people. All liberals are the ones who attack us, the ones who attack our police, saying" black lives matter "and" defend the police. "If you want to disarm the police, do you? Who do you think will come to your rescue when someone enters your apartment? "


Despite the numerous and violent clashes between protesters for and against Trump, the demonstration remained peaceful as the police maintained a strong presence.


The two groups braced themselves with cheers and taunts that provoked the other side. The pro-Trump protesters, a mostly young crowd with several of Peter's classmates in high school, yelled, "Back to nowhere!" This prompted the anti-Trump crowd to yell, "Black lives matter!" This prompted Trump supporters to yell, "All lives matter!"


Chelsea Clinton blames Trump for 200,000 coronavirus deaths

Most of Trump's supporters waved campaign equipment and American flags. The opposition had some Biden campaign posters, but many carried homemade posters with various anti-Trump slogans such as, "Love symbolizes hate", "Pro-American, against Trump", "You can't fix stupidity, but you can vote out. " Inspired by Mary Poppins, "Super Cruel Fragile Race Lying POTUS".


Two Northbrook residents, Richard and Florence, appeared at the rally to protest the anti-Trump rally, describing it as "defamatory" toward the president.


"More than 200,000 people have died ... Every loss of life is horrible, but it is not the president's fault." Florence told Fox News. "They will not admit it came from Wuhan, China. They are not telling the truth."


Virginia. Ralph Northam and his wife test positive for coronavirus:

"I think liberals have few people who have no answers," Richard pointed out across the street. "They have been sitting here since the last hour cursing us, fingering us, calling the president racist. When I went there to ask them how racist he was, they had no answers ... They just repeated what they heard on MSNBC and CNN and all the liberal networks ... They have a blind hatred towards the president and have no answers as to why "...


 
Chicago (AFP) - Gail Sayers, the dazzling runner and elusive who entered the Professional Football Hall of Fame despite shorter careers and whose fame has stretched far beyond the field for decades thanks to his friendship with fellow dying Chicago Bears, has passed away. . He was 77 years old.

Nicknamed "The Kansas Comet" and considered one of the best open field runners the game has ever seen, Cyrus passed away Wednesday, according to the Professional Football Hall of Fame.

Sayers' relatives said he has dementia. In March 2017, his wife Ardith said she had partially blamed his football career.

`` Football fans know very well Jill's many achievements on the field: a rare combination of speed and strength as the game's most exciting runner, the dangerous return for a kick, his return from a serious knee injury to lead the league in a rush, becoming the youngest player inducted into the Football Hall of Fame Professionalism, "Bears President George McCasky said in a statement. People who weren't even soccer fans got to know Jill through the TV movie 'Brian's Song,' about his friendship with teammate Brian Piccolo. Fifty years later, the movie’s message that brotherhood and love need not be defined by skin color still echoes. Hesitating. "

L from running back or kick back before or after. However, it was his enduring friendship with Piccolo, portrayed in "The Song of Brian", that marked him as more than just a sports star.

Hall of Fame president David Baker said, "The core of the team player was - calm, humble, and always ready to praise a teammate in a major block." "Gale was an extraordinary man who had overcome a great deal of adversity during his career and life in the NFL."

Sayers has become a stock broker, sports director, entrepreneur, and philanthropist for several youth initiatives within the city of Chicago after his football career was cut short by severe knee injuries.

"Jill was one of the best men in NFL history and one of the game's most exciting players," said Roger Goodell, NFL commissioner. "Jill was an exciting and elusive runner, and he impressed fans every time he touched the ball. He got his place as the first ballot in the Hall of Fame."

Football star and tracker at Omaha Central High School in Nebraska, Sayers was an all-American twice in Kansas and inducted into the College of Football Hall of Fame. Chosen by Chicago with the fourth pick overall in 1965, its versatility produced profits and spotlight reel wagons with opposing defenses initially.

He tied the NFL record with six touchdowns in a game and another mode with 22 touchdowns in his first season: 14 lunges, six recalls, one kick and one kick return. Sayers was the unanimous choice of Rookie of the Year.

"I've played football for a long time and have never seen a better footballer than the Sayers generation," said Mike Ditka, Sayers' teammate from 1965 to 1966. "I mean this. The hair was in motion. Besides, he was an amazing guy. It's just a shame that he's gone. He was special."

Ditka later coached Walter Payton, giving him a closer look at two of the best full-backs. But the greatest performance it saw was perhaps the Sayers' landing six. Playing San Francisco in muddy Wrigley Stadium, almost everyone was slipping and sliding.

"He was playing in a different stadium than we are now," Ditka said. "The field was wet, it was slippery, and it was kind of mud. It was incredible. It had incredible rides and wounds."

Sayers was an all-professional during the first five of his seven NFL seasons (1965-1971). But he was stuck in a handful of medium to bad bear teams, and like Dick Butkus, another Hall of Fame teammate chosen in the same 1965 draft, never played in the post-season period. Sayers has appeared in only 68 matches and only 2 in each of the last two seasons while trying to return from knee injuries.

"I will miss a great friend who helped me become the player I became because after training and quarreling against a generation I knew I could play against anyone," said Boutkus. "We lost one of the best bears ever, and most importantly, we lost an adorable person."

In 1977, at the age of 34, Sayers became the youngest player to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. Upon presenting it at the ceremony, Bears founder George Hallas said: "If you want to see perfection as a step backwards, you'd better get a Gail Sayers movie. The hair was in motion. The like would never be seen again."

Butkos said he didn't even watch Sayers play until a landmark movie was shown at an event in New York that both attended in honor of the All-America team.
Of 1964. He said the realistic version of Sayers was better.

"It was amazing. I still attribute a lot of my success to trying to heal it (practically)," said Potkus at the Bears centenary celebration in June 2019.

"I've never had a back like this in my entire career, even full-back. That was involving OJ (Simpson) and two other men." "Nobody can touch this man."

The Bears penned them with straight picks in '65, with Butkus taking 3 and Sayers at No. 4. It didn't take long for Sayers to beat the veterans who helped the Bears win the NFL Championship in 1963.

"We were first, so they will make it difficult for us and show us the ropes and everything else," said Potkus. "But Gail was running circles around everyone. They quickly adopted it."

The friendship between Sayers and co-star Piccolo began in 1967, when the two became unexpected roommates. Sayers was black and he was already a star; Piccolo was white and his way out of the training squad. Early on, K.