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Protests have the power to change the political landscape and history is proof.An assistant professor who studied unrest in the 1960s says how things change is determined by the way protesters share their message.“When the tactics on the ground, which are essentially telling a story, tell a story that focuses our attention on rights, on injustice, then that's what the media emphasizes,” said Omar Wasow, assistant professor at Princeton University. “Civil rights, you know a redress of grievances, and those kinds of stories can powerfully move politics.”Wasow researched protests during the civil rights movement. He found during the early 60s, the wave of peaceful protests led to public opinion favoring their message and legislation getting passed. But later protesters became more violent and public opinion shifted again.“What we saw in the 1960s was that you can trigger a kind of backlash movement in which the taste for law and order, a kind of more police-centric narrative comes to the fore and that's going to make it harder for folks who are trying to push for reform,” said Wasow. Wasow says politicians were able to capitalize on that anxiety, like when Nixon won the 1968 election.While we don't know yet how much of an impact there may be this year, Wasow sees a lot of similarities between then and now.He thinks reforms are possible, if protesters keep attention on inequalities in the criminal justice system and state violence. 1463
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Confederate monuments have become a target of protesters demonstrating against the police killing of George Floyd. As tense protests swelled across the country Saturday into early Sunday, monuments in Virginia, the Carolinas and Mississippi were defaced. The headquarters of the United Daughters of the Confederacy in Richmond also burned for a time and had graffiti scrawled on its exterior. The presence of Confederate monuments across the South and elsewhere in the United States has been challenged for years. Some of the targeted monuments have been under consideration for removal. In Tennessee and Pennsylvania, statues of people criticized for racist views, but without Confederate ties were also targeted. 747

Robert Mueller has been subpoenaed by the House Judiciary and Intelligence Committees to testify on July 17 to address the special counsel's probe into the 2016 election. Mueller previously said that his report would act as his testimony, and he would not say anything beyond what is in the report. “The report is my testimony. I would not provide information beyond that which is already public in any appearance before Congress," Mueller said last month.In his report, Mueller found that the Trump campaign had multiple contact with the Russian government during the 2016 election. Although Mueller concluded that the Russians' involvement in the election was illegal, the Trump's campaign ties to the Russians did not amount to a criminal conspiracy. Mueller's team also investigated a number of obstruction of justice allegations involving President Donald Trump. Mueller could not make a judgment on Trump's guilt as he said that Department of Justice guidelines suggest a sitting president cannot be criminally charged. 1038
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A high school football player in St. Petersburg, Florida, is brain dead after collapsing during Friday night's game, according to the teen's mother.After a group tackle, 17-year-old Jacquez Welch of Northeast High School never stood back up. Paramedics rushed Welch to Bayfront Hospital where doctors discovered a pre-existing brain condition that no one knew about. They say Jacquez was born with arteriovenous malformation, also known as AVM. It's an abnormal connection between the arteries and veins in the brain. Marcia Nelson, his mother, was in the stands when it happened. She said in a press conference Monday that her son is brain dead and his collapse had nothing to do with the sport."I don't want anybody to be scared of sports," Nelson said. "It just happened to him at an early age, doing what he loved to do."Nelson said the family is working on making her son an organ donor to seven people. The family plans to take Jacquez off life support Monday night after an honor walk at 10 p.m. at Bayfront Hospital. "I am content. This is not anything I could control," Nelson said calmly. Nelson said Jacquez was a giving person and he would be proud that his organs will be used to save other lives. Nelson says football was his passion. He was also an older brother who served as a role model for his siblings. 1358
Smoking even one cigarette a day during pregnancy can double the chance of sudden unexpected death for your baby, according to a new study analyzing over 20 million births, including over 19,000 unexpected infant deaths.The study, published Monday in the journal Pediatrics, analyzed data on smoking during pregnancy from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's birth/infant death data set between 2007 and 2011 and found that the risk of death rises by .07 for each additional cigarette smoked, up to 20 a day, a typical pack of cigarettes.By the time you smoke a pack a day, the study found, your baby's risk of unexpected sudden death has nearly tripled compared with infants of nonsmokers."One of the most compelling and most important points that I would take away from the study is that even smoking one or two cigarettes still had an effect on sudden infant death," said pulmonologist Dr. Cedric "Jamie" Rutland, a national spokesman for the American Lung Association."Every cigarette counts," said lead study author Tatiana Anderson, a neuroscientist at the Seattle Children's Research Institute. "And doctors should be having these conversations with their patients and saying, 'Look, you should quit. That's your best odds for decreasing sudden infant death. But if you can't, every cigarette that you can reduce does help.' "SIDS and SUIDSudden infant death syndrome, known as SIDS, was a frightening, unexplained phenomenon for parents for decades until research discovered a connection between a baby's sleeping position and the sudden deaths. If babies between 1 month and 1 year of age were put to sleep on their stomachs, the risk of dying of SIDS doubled, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.The introduction of the "back to sleep" campaign in 1994 educated parents about the dangers, and the rate of deaths dropped by about 50% when parents began putting babies to sleep on their backs. That was soon followed by recommendations to remove bumpers, blankets, toys and other potentially suffocating clutter from the crib.By 2010, the rates of SIDS in the United States had fallen to about 2,000 a year, compared with nearly 4,700 in 1993, the American Academy of Pediatrics says.But while the numbers of babies dying of SIDS decreased, two other types of sudden infant death -- ill-defined causes and accidental suffocation -- have risen over the past two decades, Anderson said, bringing total deaths to approximately 3,700 a year.Today, researchers combine the three types of death and call it SUID, short for sudden unexpected infant death.The link to smokingResearch has shown a direct link between mother's smoking and SUID. According to the 2699
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