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Study: Refugees Stay In Manufacturing Jobs Longer Than Other Employees https://ift.tt/2GGo1p0 Refugees in the United States, some 15% of whom work in manufacturing jobs, stay in those jobs longer than do other employees, according to a new study by the Fiscal Policy Institute. The report, commissioned by Tent -- the non-profit founded by Chobani yogurt billionaire Hamdi Ulukaya to help businesses support refugees -- studied employment trends in four areas that are major sites of refugee resettlement. Those areas were Atlanta, Phoenix, upstate New York and central Nebraska. The study found that the average turnover rate for refugees at manufacturing companies was just 4%, far below the 11% for all employees. Across industries, 73% of the employers surveyed reported a higher retention rate for refugees than for other employees. "We had anecdotal evidence suggesting it. I don't think we expected to see quite as big a disparity," says Gideon Maltz, Tent's executive director. "These are people who have needed to flee their home countries because of violence and persecution, and are so eager to have a new opportunity. I think there is a degree of loyalty and gratitude for companies that are willing to take a chance on them." That higher retention rate would save businesses that hire refugees thousands of dollars. Citing a 2012 study by researchers at the Center for American Progress that replacing a worker typically costs businesses about one-fifth of the worker's annual salary, the Fiscal Policy Institute report notes that for a full-time worker earning $13 an hour that translates to $5,200 per year saved for each worker that doesn't have to be replaced. That cost savings, the report adds, should give employers flexibility to invest in translation services, help with transportation, or other ways of helping refugees integrate into their workplaces. Manufacturing is a key industry for refugees because such jobs typically require less fluency in English. The jobs held by refugees are often not the higher-wage, more-skilled manufacturing jobs, such as in the auto industry, but rather positions in plants that assemble furniture or mold plastic, where compensation may be near minimum wage, according to the report. At one of the firms studied, a high-end specialty manufacturer that was not identified, one-fifth of its 150 employees are refugees, a group it began hiring five years ago when turnover was higher than today. The result: The turnover rate among refugees was just 2%, versus 13% for all employees – while the company’s production quality had improved. A second firm, a metal manufacturing company with 180 employees including 40 refugees, found that its willingness to allow employees to prove themselves through a 60-day probation period had allowed it to widen its pool of potential employees. Between 2008 and 2017, the United States has admitted 670,000 refugees, the majority of whom do not have family or sponsors here and are placed in locations by the federal government in consultation with local authorities and resettlement agencies. The number of refugees accepted annually has varied from about 50,000 to 100,000 over the past decade, but hit a low point of 33,000 in 2017 due to the Trump Administration's travel bans and decisions to cut resettlement numbers. It is expected to fall to 20,000 this year. Tent's Maltz says that hiring by global manufacturers that have operations in countries like Turkey, Jordan and Bangladesh, where the majority of the world's 22 million refugees reside, would have more impact than anything that companies located just in the United States could do. "We think there is a tremendous opportunity for American and European brands to think about how to bring refugees into their factories and supply chains," he says. "We are talking with a bunch of companies about bringing refugees into their large-scale factories." He hopes to have an agreement with at least one major manufacturer by the fall. A handful of major companies have made public commitments to hire refugees, including Starbucks, which pledged to hire 10,000 refugees worldwide, and office-sharing giant WeWork, which vowed to hire 1,500. Ikea, meanwhile, set up a design workshop in Jordan, where 100 women, half of them refugees, embroider textiles and make other artisanal items. And Ulukaya, a Kurd who grew up raising sheep in eastern Turkey, arrived in the U.S. in 1994 and made his fortune, currently $1.75 billion, as the king of Greek yogurt. He has since hired hundreds of refugees for his own operations and signed the giving pledge with a promise to donate the majority of his wealth to helping refugees and ending the humanitarian crisis. Business via Forbes - Entrepreneurs https://ift.tt/dTEDZf May 22, 2018 at 02:29AM
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A bullet was sent to the home of Malaysia's top anti-corruption official investigating a former prime minister — and now he's back to finish what he started https://ift.tt/2x1MghT Nicky Loh/Getty Images
Mohd Shukri Abdull, chief of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC), told reporters on Tuesday that during a 2015 investigation into how billions of dollars when missing from state investment fund 1MDB he was repeatedly threatened and told he would be "arrested and locked up." “I was threatened to be fired, asked to retire early, take leave early, and be pulled into the training department," Shukri said, adding that witnesses he interviewed were "taken away." "I was sent a bullet to my house. I never told my wife or my family. I never even made a police report," Shukri said. He added: "We wanted to bring back money that was stolen back to our country. Instead we were accused of bringing down the country, we were accused of being traitors," tearing up during his remarks. "I cried like a baby. I felt very guilty. Former MACC chief Abu Kassim and I have been accused of betrayal." At one point Shukri even flew to Washington to bring the 1MDB case, in which suspicious funds ended up in the personal accounts of Najib, to US authorities. But when he was followed and photographed by people he knew he went to New York where he was provided three NYPD "bodyguards." On Tuesday he said he "nearly died" during the whole process. Shukri was previously MACC's deputy chief commissioner but resigned in an emotional speech in 2016, saying he had been accused of trying to overthrow the government and urged his collagues to "be brave." He was appointed head of the commission after Malaysia's new prime minister, Mahathir Mohamad, beat Najib at the polls nearly two weeks ago. It was a shock result and the opposition alliance now holds power for the first time in the country's independent history. Mahathir also announced a renewed effort in investigating the 1MDB scandal. A new taskforce has been created and the prime minister said he expects charges to be laid. Earlier today, Shukri interviewed Najib over $10.6 million found in the former prime minister's bank account which allegedly originated from a former 1MDB subsidiary. "I'm coming back to finish what I haven't finished," Shukri said. Shukri also mentioned $681 million found in Najib's accounts in 2015. At the time, a member of the Saudi royal family said the funds were a "personal donation," and Shukri said on Tuesday they approached that prince who confirmed making the donation. "But when we asked for supporting documents, he couldn't produce any," Shukri said. See Also:
Business via Business Insider https://ift.tt/eKERsB May 22, 2018 at 02:18AM
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Blaze Becomes Beryl: How The "Bosch of Bikes" Turned A U.S. Lawsuit Into A Positive https://ift.tt/2kcCIr4 “Safety is the biggest barrier for people who don't cycle,” British entrepreneur Emily Brooke tells Forbes. “You could be lit up like a Christmas tree but if you’re caught in a vehicle's blind spot you can't be seen.” This is why she launched Blaze in 2012, a startup that developed a bright lazer light cyclists could use to shine a green beam on to the road 20 feet ahead of them. On the surface, the London business has had a smooth ascent, selling its patented Laserlight to city cyclists and entering huge cycle scheme partnerships both in the British capital and in New York, all while quietly pioneering its own smart bike technology. But behind closed doors, Brooke has spent years navigating a “horrific” legal disaster involving another bike light company called Blaze in the U.S.. It all came about because of naivety, the founder says, as she hadn’t realized how different U.K. and U.S. trademark laws were. “I searched and there was no registered mark, but in America, you don't need to have a registered mark, a name is yours by right just by trading under it,” she explains. The bigger the British Blaze got, the more concerned its American adversary became, and when it reached their lawyers it became clear Brooke would have to let the name Blaze go. “I was obviously very personally attached, we used to get letters to the office addressed to “Dear Miss Blaze,” says Brooke. “It was the most painful period in our entire Blaze history.” Turning a lawsuit into a positive Despite this, instead of dwelling, Brooke used her business savvy to turn the lawsuit into a positive re-branding opportunity. “From the outside, it looked like all we did was sell bike lights, and this was an opportunity to reposition ourselves and tell the world actually what we do,” she explains. It’s with this in mind that Blaze has this week become Beryl: a name that refers to an emerald-aquamarine gemstone that’s as bright as Brooke’s own green lasers, and to Beryl Burton, an exemplary British cyclist who won over 100 domestic and seven world titles. Coming up with an apt name that was was short and similar in tone Blaze wasn’t easy though. “It was like searching for a silver bullet, a magical, mythical thing that was just not possible,” Brooke recalls. “Every time we found something I didn't completely hate, it came back with 75 potential infringement cases.” Fortunately, the founder stuck gold when she turned to fellow entrepreneur Radha Agrawal (cofounder of Thinx and Daybreaker) who came up with Beryl in just 20 minutes. “She used me as an inspiration, and started looking up leading lights in women's cycling,” says Brooke. “And when Beryl Burton set the men's time trial record, she very famously overtook Mike McNamara and handed him a Licorice Allsort as she passed him,” Brooke laughs. Evolution and revolution The Beryl rebrand has given Brooke a new space to show how her company has evolved: when she started the company at university, it was entirely focused on bike lights which she backed using Kickstarter raising £55,000 ($74,000)—more than double her goal. From 2015 Blaze started landing its first six-figure cycle scheme partnerships, and last year the company closed a £4.5 million round ($6 million) bringing its total funding to £8 million ($11 million). This year Brooke’s team has doubled in size as it gears up to sell its smart bike technology to bike manufacturers. “Our new Santander bikes have light sensors, temperature sensors, accelerometers, and we’re looking at moving into air quality monitoring to get a real sense of the city,” says Brooke. Other companies like Serco (which operate London’s Santander cycles) benefit from data around distance cycled and battery life to help them manage their bikes and ensure they are all serviced regularly. And although Brooke isn’t monetizing on data at present she says there is “huge potential” for this in the future. What’s next? Returning to her initial mission to get more cyclists on their own bikes, Brooke now plans to launch a new more affordable range of lights (starting at £15, compared to the current range which starts at £49), with its first-ever global retail partnerships. “Our consumer revenue tripled in the earlier years, but this year is going to be the real year for growth because this year we've got products that can actually scale,” says Brooke of the newly developed range. The founder also wants to ensure that bike fleets around the world can use Beryl technology to become smart bikes that log data continuously, rather than simply when they dock. “Bosch do electric motors for everyone, we’re going to be the Bosch of smart bikes,” says Brooke. For Beryl, the future looks bright—and green. Business via Forbes - Entrepreneurs https://ift.tt/dTEDZf May 22, 2018 at 01:32AM AI-Powered Bank Accounts Of Tomorrow Are Solving The Biggest Problem With Your Finances -- You5/22/2018
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AI-Powered Bank Accounts Of Tomorrow Are Solving The Biggest Problem With Your Finances -- You https://ift.tt/2s2WMzH In Canada, millions of people are handing over control of their money. Not to an expensive financial adviser or bank manager, but to the Royal Bank of Canada’s artificial assistant NOMI, which moves money around and makes decisions when to save on their behalf. The idea of a machine making financial decisions for you might seem unsettling, but people don’t just like using NOMI, they seem to love it.
Now some of the world’s biggest banks believe autonomous banking is the future, and NOMI is just the start. Robotic banking Israeli entrepreneur David Sosna predicted the rise of AI banking nearly 20 years ago. He co-founded Personetics with the mission of building the kinds of smart features he believed banks would one day need. “Rather than fighting against them, we were trying to find ways to help banks be as agile and intelligent as Google,” Sosna tells Forbes. Today Personetics is going from strength to strength, developing the technology behind NOMI as well as the AI assistants of Romania’s Banca Transilvania, the Israel Discount Bank, Britain’s Metro Bank and digital challenger Tandem. Personetics is starting by letting banks build AIs which analyze customer data for unusual spending patterns, identify spare money which could be saved or upcoming subscription payments which might leave someone overdrawn. While some investment services like Betterment and Nutmeg have used algorithms to make investment decisions, this is the first time we’ve seen the same principles applied to current accounts. “You can apply the same principles to a bank account as a driverless car—once we understand your goals, your obligations and your way of living, there's no reason why machines can't make the right decisions, or even better decisions than a person can,” says Sosna. Indeed there’s a basic financial error that millions of us make every month, which AI could solve. Killing off the nest egg “You've got a credit card balance that you should pay off, but you also really want to have some savings—in that situation most people will make the wrong decision to save,” Bud CEO and co-founder Edward Maslaveckas tells Forbes. Indeed the instinct to put money away as a nest egg is usually the wrong one, especially while savings interest rates are at a historic low and any money sitting in your current account is essentially losing value every day.
Bud is the startup building the smarts behind HSBC’s artha AI app for its First Direct customers, which today lets them analyze spending across all their accounts. “Through artha we'll soon start spotting whether you're on a variable tariff and maybe you'll consider switching your bills to save some money, then we can help you decide what to do with those savings,” says Maslaveckas. But simple decisions like spending and saving are just the start, soon we might rely on artificial intelligence to make the biggest financial decisions of our lives. Making the big decision In the 1950s a current account, mortgage and pension were all most people needed—today add a student loan, a credit card, a Lifetime ISA, Monzo account, Revolut card holding multiple currencies, and an investment app like Moneybox or Wealthify, things start looking a little more complicated. “Banking in general is not becoming easier, who is sitting down with excel sheets and really understanding what's going on in their finances?” asks Personetics’ Sosna. The truth is that while the fintech revolution might market itself as simplifying our finances, in fact, more choice is only complicating matters. “I think in three years machines will be making big financial decisions in our lives, it's just a question of when, not if.” Are you ready to hand over control? Business via Forbes - Entrepreneurs https://ift.tt/dTEDZf May 22, 2018 at 01:32AM
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Russia's 'practically unlimited' -range missile looks like an embarrassment after it reportedly lasted for just 2 minutes and 22 miles https://ift.tt/2kgpjyy Mark Schiefelbein - Pool/Getty Images
The cruise missile, which Russian President Vladimir Putin unveiled at a Russian Federal Assembly in March, only flew for around two minutes and traveled 22 miles before it lost control and crashed, CNBC reported Monday. Another missile test reportedly lasted just four seconds with a distance of five miles. Russia tested the missile four times between November and February at the behest of senior officials, even though engineers voiced doubt over the program, according to CNBC's sources. Putin previously touted a new generation of weapons in a presentation that displayed missile trajectories going from Russia to the US. In addition to the cruise missile, Putin teased unmanned underwater drones purportedly capable of carrying a nuclear warhead, and a hypersonic glide vehicle. "I want to tell all those who have fueled the arms race over the last 15 years, sought to win unilateral advantages over Russia, introduced unlawful sanctions aimed to contain our country's development: All what you wanted to impede with your policies have already happened," Putin said in a speech. "You have failed to contain Russia." Russia's cruise missile capabilities may have missed the mark, but sources said it succeeded in other aspects. The hypersonic glide vehicle, which is believed to be able to travel five times the speed of sound, would render US countermeasures useless and could become operational by 2020, according to CNBC. "We don't have any defense that could deny the employment of such a weapon against us," US Air Force General John Hyten, the commander of US Strategic Command, said at a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing in March. NOW WATCH: I ate nothing but 'healthy' fast food for a week — here’s what happened See Also:
SEE ALSO: Putin says Russian troops will soon receive new Yars ICBMs — here's what they can do Business via Business Insider https://ift.tt/eKERsB May 22, 2018 at 01:18AM
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Cytox Launches Collaboration Agreement with Mayo Clinic to Evaluate Novel Genetic Based Approaches for Assessing Alzheimer’s Risk https://ift.tt/2rY0sDU Important research collaboration for pioneering PRS approach OXFORD, England & MANCHESTER, England–(BUSINESS WIRE)–May 22, 2018– Cytox, a precision medicine front-runner which today is commercializing polygenic risk scoring (PRS) approaches for assessing genetic risk for developing Alzheimer’s and other neurological diseases, has announced it has entered into a research collaboration with Mayo Clinic to test current and develop new proprietary algorithms relating to the diagnosis and prognosis of Alzheimer’s disease. Under the agreement Cytox will assess genetic risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease using its current commercially available approaches developed to run on the Thermo Fisher Scientific Applied Biosystems™ GeneTitan™ Multi-Channel (MC) instrument platform, in addition to new approaches under development. Mayo Clinic’s Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center will provide biobank samples from research participants classified as clinically normal, diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment and diagnosed with mild Alzheimer’s disease with associated amyloid PET imaging data. Genotyping of DNA samples will be performed by Cytox’s US genotyping services partner, AKESOgen, an integrated genomics, genetics and biobanking company and precision medicine leader based near Atlanta, Georgia. “The Mayo Clinic Alzheimer’s biobank presents a tremendous research opportunity, not only due to the thousands of blood samples it holds, but also because of the clinical annotation accompanying the samples,” commented Dr Richard Pither, CEO of Cytox, “By working closely with Mayo Clinic and its researchers, we hope to further validate the performance of our current approaches for assessing genetic risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease, and develop new, more targeted, precision-based methods. We hope that data generated through this collaboration will enable the identification of a predictive polygenic risk score that then can be applied to other cohorts for future studies, such as clinical trials, that could benefit from stratification based on the risk of developing disease. Over time we plan to make the products and services that result from this collaboration available to both physicians and patients. Recent increased interest and funding for Alzheimer’s disease research is reflected in the US 2018 Omnibus Budget Bill which includes $414 million in new funding for Alzheimer’s disease research – a 30% increase. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20180521005323/en/ Cytox Limited Business via VentureBeat https://venturebeat.com May 22, 2018 at 12:58AM
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The wild story of how a convicted pedophile got his picture taken with Trump https://ift.tt/2kdtTgN AP
One deal they struggled to secure seemed much simpler: a photo of Nader with Trump. According to the Associated Press, the US Secret Service had explicitly told Broidy, who was co-hosting a fundraiser for Trump and the Republican National Committee in October 2017, that Nader was not allowed to meet Trump. The exact reason why was unclear, the AP said, but it may have stemmed from Nader's past conviction on pedophilia charges in Europe, of which he was given a one-year jail sentence in the Czech Republic in 2003. Additionally, RNC officials reportedly said no one could take a photo with Trump without donating to the campaign. Broidy reportedly suggested to Nader that a donation of $100,000 to $250,000 would be enough to score the coveted photo. Nader got the photo, which shows him with Trump, grinning in front of the American flag. On November 30, Broidy donated $189,000 to the RNC. At the time, that was more money than he had given to the Republican Party in his over two decades of fundraising for Republicans, the AP said. NOW WATCH: Ian Bremmer: Why the American dream doesn't exist anymore See Also:
SEE ALSO: How a top Trump fundraiser spent a year cultivating 2 crown princes to nail $1 billion in business Business via Business Insider https://ift.tt/eKERsB May 22, 2018 at 12:54AM
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Microsoft and Google disclose new chip flaw related to Spectre and Meltdown https://ift.tt/2s3fW8E (Reuters) — Cyber security researchers have found a new security flaw that affects a broad swath of modern computing chips and is related to the Spectre and Meltdown chip flaws that emerged in January. The newest chip problem, known as Speculative Store Bypass or “Variant 4” because it’s in the same family as the original group of flaws, was disclosed by security researchers at Microsoft and Alphabet’s Google on Monday. Though the flaw affects many chips from Intel, Advanced Micro Devices and Softbank’s ARM Holdings, researchers described the risks as low, partly because of web browser patches already issued earlier this year to address Spectre. The Meltdown and Spectre flaws, which emerged in January, can allow passwords and other sensitive data on chips to be read. The flaws result from the way computers try to guess what users are likely to do next, a process called speculative execution. When the flaws emerged in January, researchers warned that they were likely to find new variants of Spectre in the future. Earlier this month, German computer science magazine c’t reported that a “next generation” of flaws had been found in Intel’s chips and was likely to be disclosed this month. Intel declined to comment on whether Monday’s announcement was related to the German magazine’s story. In its research findings, Microsoft said that patches issued for common web browsers earlier this year greatly increased the difficulty of carrying out an attack with the newly discovered flaw. Chips from Intel, AMD and ARM all have patches available, either directly from the makers or through software suppliers such as Microsoft. Intel said it expects a performance slowdown of between 2 percent and 8 percent from the patches, and ARM said it expects a slowdown of between 1 percent and 2 percent. However, Intel said that because of the low risk of a real-world attack, it would ship its patches turned off by default, giving users the choice whether to turn them on. AMD also advised leaving the patches turned off due to the difficulty of carrying out an attack. The security problems do not appear to have impacted chipmakers’ stock prices. Intel shares are up nearly 16 percent to since the start of the year to $54.32, and AMD shares are up 18.3 percent to $12.99 since the start of the year. Business via VentureBeat https://venturebeat.com May 21, 2018 at 11:54PM
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A woman will lead the New York Stock Exchange for the first time in its 226-year history https://ift.tt/2IB0dsE Michael Nagle/Getty Images
The parent company of the New York Stock Exchange has named a new president to lead the iconic Wall Street institution, a spokeswoman confirmed to Business Insider. Stacey Cunningham, the chief operating officer of the NYSE, is set to become the president of the exchange venue, which is owned by Atlanta-based Intercontinental Exchange. She will be the exchange's first female president since its founding over 200 years ago. On Friday, Cunningham will replace Tom Farley, who has served as the president of NYSE since 2014. Farley was the second-youngest person to head the exchange. John Tuttle, the head of listings at NYSE, is replacing Cunningham as COO, according to a spokeswoman. Farley is joining a firm backed by Third Point, the hedge fund founded by Daniel Loeb, according to The Wall Street Journal, which first reported the executive shakeup. Cunningham has been with NYSE since 2012. She joined the exchange from cross-town rival Nasdaq. Notably, Nasdaq named Adena Friedman as its chief executive officer in 2017. That made her the first female to lead a global exchange. As noted by the Wall Street Journal, the appointment of Cunningham follows the rise of the #MeToo movement on Wall Street and the announcement that the "Fearless Girl" statue, a symbol of feminism, will be relocated in front of the exchange. See Also:
Business via Business Insider https://ift.tt/eKERsB May 21, 2018 at 11:30PM Mike Pence issues warning to Kim Jong Un if the North Korean leader 'doesn't make a deal' with Trump5/21/2018
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Mike Pence issues warning to Kim Jong Un if the North Korean leader 'doesn't make a deal' with Trump https://ift.tt/2kdv0Nx Sara D. Davis/Getty Images
"There was some talk about the Libyan model last week," Pence said in an interview on Fox News. "As the President made clear, this will only end like the Libyan model ended if Kim Jong Un doesn't make a deal." Pence referred to the controversy surrounding comments national security adviser John Bolton made in recent weeks, and remarks President Donald Trump made last week. During an interview on CBS's "Face the Nation," Bolton said that if the Trump administration were to make concessions, it would be "looking at the Libya model of 2003, 2004" in terms of North Korea being required to surrender its nuclear weapons. In the interview, Bolton said that similar to the US's previous stance on Libya, it would need to verify that North Korea's denuclearization efforts were "real and not just rhetoric." "But one thing that Libya did that led us to overcome our skepticism was that they allowed American and British observers into all their nuclear related sites," Bolton said. "So it wasn't a question of relying on international mechanisms. We saw them in ways we had never seen before." North Korea's propaganda outlets condemned Bolton's remarks, which also cast uncertainty on the future of the upcoming summit between Trump and Kim. "World knows too well that our country is neither Libya nor Iraq which have met miserable fate," North Korea's vice minister reportedly wrote. "It is absolutely absurd to dare compare [North Korea], a nuclear weapon state, to Libya which had been at the initial stage of nuclear development." Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi voluntarily gave up his country's nuclear weapons program in 2003. Eight years later, rebel forces killed him violently, and his demise was on full display for the world to see. That's a possibility that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has likely taken into account in his country's plans to work toward denuclearization. Trump addressed North Korea's abrupt shift on Thursday, saying that "the Libya model isn't the model that we have at all when we're thinking of North Korea," and that Kim would still be "running his country." Trump's definition of a "Libya model" appears to have differed from Bolton's. The national security adviser advocated for verification of North Korea's denuclearization efforts, but he did not seem to imply that the US would try to remove the North Korean leadership. Pence's remarks on Monday appear to have added to the confusion. When asked if his comparison between Libya and North Korea could be perceived as a threat, he responded: "Well, I think it's more of a fact." "I don't think President Trump is thinking about public relations," Pence said. "He's thinking about peace." "It would be a great mistake for Kim Jong Un to think he could play Donald Trump." NOW WATCH: Jeff Bezos on breaking up and regulating Amazon See Also:
SEE ALSO: Trump reportedly thinks he doesn't need to prepare for his summit with North Korea Business via Business Insider https://ift.tt/eKERsB May 21, 2018 at 11:18PM |
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