New Injustice 2 Trailer Explains The Game’s New Gear System

Following the success of the first Injustice video game in which it pit DC heroes and villains against each other in an arcade style fighting game, we’re sure many are eager to see what Injustice 2 will be bringing to the table. We will of course be getting a familiar roster of heroes and villains as well as some new ones, but there will be new features added to the game as well.

In the latest trailer released for the game, it explains the new gear system that will be introduced to the game. In the description it reads, “With every clash comes change and the opportunity for evolution. The Gear System brings a new level of depth to the game, allowing players to evolve their play style and achieve their goals. Gear opens up vast possibilities for personalization by enabling combatants of all levels to build and power up the ultimate version of their favorite DC characters to fit their fighting style.”

Basically in addition to providing new visuals for your characters, there will be elements taken from RPGs in the form of set gear and set bonuses, where the more pieces you own of a particular set, the better the bonuses will be. Exactly how one earns or unlocks these new gears is unclear, but we expect you’ll find out once the game launches on the 16th of May, 2017.

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Splatoon 2 is arriving on Nintendo Switch this July

Splatoon 2, the sequel to Nintendo‘s hit Splatoon game, will be arriving on the Nintendo Switch this upcoming July, the company has announced. The game’s release on July 21 will coincide with the release of Splatoon 2 amiibo figures, of which the company says it’ll be making Inkling Squid, Inkling Girl, and Inkling Boy available. Joining these announcements is a … Continue reading

Trump Says NATO Accepted His Demands, Declares It No Longer Obsolete

WASHINGTON – Although candidate Donald Trump threatened to “dissolve” NATO if member nations didn’t pay up, President Trump on Wednesday praised the group as a “great alliance” – thanks, he suggested, to changes made because of his demands.

Appearing beside NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg at a White House news conference, Trump said that in addition to getting nations to increase their spending, he also had made the 28-nation alliance start paying attention to terrorism. “I said it was obsolete,” Trump said Wednesday. “It’s no longer obsolete.”

Just a year ago, at a campaign rally in Wisconsin, Trump promised he would tell NATO’s other member nations: “Fellas, you haven’t paid for years. Give us the money or get the hell out. Get out.”

That sentiment has persisted into his presidency. During a visit to the White House last month from German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Trump raised the issue with her about Germany’s NATO commitments. He tweeted the following day: “Germany owes vast sums of money to NATO & the United States must be paid more for the powerful, and very expensive, defense it provides to Germany!”

On Wednesday, Trump chided Stoltenberg regarding back payments that other countries supposedly still owe.

“I did ask about all the money that hasn’t been paid over the years ― will that money be coming back? We’ll be talking about that,” Trump said.

But it’s not clear whether the president fully understands how NATO is structured.

Each member state helps pay for the organization’s bureaucratic costs, but those payments are minuscule. Far more significant is the agreement that an attack on one country is considered an attack on all of their combined militaries.

Most NATO countries cut back on military spending following the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991, as did the United States. In 2014, following Russian aggression in Ukraine and the rise of the Islamic State terrorist group on the border of member nation Turkey, NATO members agreed to increase their defense spending to 2 percent of their gross domestic product by 2024.

Neither the United States nor NATO itself acts as a central bank for the alliance, collecting dues or allocating payments. Rather, each nation raises money from its own citizens to spend on defense. No country “owes” the United States, or NATO, anything for past budgetary choices.

As for focusing on terrorism, the first and only time NATO invoked the common defense element of its charter was after al Qaeda terrorists attacked the United States on Sept. 11, 2001. NATO forces subsequently attacked al Qaeda and its sponsors, the Taliban, in Afghanistan.

U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis has said he would like to see NATO member nations’ plans to reach that 2 percent target by the end of this year. Stoltenberg says he has made it his top priority to get member nations to increase their military spending.

“For the first time of the many, many years of decline in defense spending, we now see an increase in defense spending across Europe and Canada. So they have started to move in the right direction,” Stoltenberg said Wednesday, adding that next year, eight of the 28 nations would be spending 2 percent, up from five last year.

The United States, in contrast, has been spending closer to twice that target percentage ― 3.6 percent in 2015 ― on defense, although that total includes spending on Navy, Air Force and troop deployments in the Pacific and other parts of the world.

Whether those costs ― which are difficult to parse, as the defense budget is not structured geographically ― can reasonably be allocated as NATO-related is debatable. Some analysts argue that all U.S. defense spending can be thought of as beneficial to NATO.

“Even U.S. Pacific forces contribute to NATO’s security by deterring conflict and ensuring free flow of trade,” said Katherine Blakely, a research fellow with the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. “Even if other NATO member nations weren’t involved in a conflict, the economy of NATO states would take a huge hit if there was a major conflict in the Asia-Pacific [region].”

During Trump’s campaign, he frequently bashed NATO and accused other member nations of taking advantage of the United States. He regularly called the organization “obsolete.”

“It’s obsolete. We spend too much money. We’re not getting the benefits that we should be getting for the money,” Trump told Fox News in April 2016.

At the Wisconsin rally that same month, Trump also said: “Maybe NATO will dissolve and that’s OK. It’s not the worst thing in the world.”

“We have countries within NATO that are taking advantage of us. With me, I believe they’re going to pay,” he told NBC News in July 2016.

Trump’s comments have made European allies uneasy, particularly when combined with his strong and habitual praise of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

To assuage those allies, others in Trump’s administration have affirmed the United States’ commitment to the seven-decades-old alliance in visits to Europe. Trump himself is expected to attend a NATO summit in Brussels next month in what is to be the first foreign trip of his presidency.

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Seriously?! Officer Appears To Stomp On Handcuffed Suspect’s Head

The suspect was lying handcuffed on the ground, held down by one police officer, when another officer ran up and appeared to stomp on his head. A passerby captured the disturbing scene on video, leading to public outcry even from the mayor.

The incident occurred in Columbus, Ohio, on Saturday. Only two weeks earlier, the white officer with the heavy step had managed to avoid charges related to fatally shooting a black man in 2016, local 10 TV News reported.

Columbus Officer Zachary Rosen was responding to a report of a discharged firearm this past weekend when video recorded his use of what appears to be unreasonable force on the restrained suspect. The latter man, identified as DeMarco Anderson, is black.

“Are you serious?” Anderson is heard shouting after he was hit. “I got cuffs on, sir! Are you serious?”

The Columbus police agency distanced itself from the officer’s behavior, which it said in a statement “does not meet the standards [of] the Columbus Division of Police.” 

“It appears to be inconsistent with the values and training we instill in our officers,” the agency said. “The officer self-reported a kick to the suspect while the suspect was in custody. We’ll learn more as the investigation continues and take appropriate actions based on the facts gathered. The officer has been temporarily reassigned.”

Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther also condemned the officer’s actions in a post on Twitter, calling his behavior “unacceptable.”

According to court records cited by The Daily Beast, police originally confronted Anderson for allegedly threatening to shoot people inside a nearby home. He elbowed a different officer in the face and ran. Police caught up with him a block away. The suspect was allegedly found carrying a handgun and a substance suspected of being crack cocaine. He has since been charged with resisting arrest, obstructing official business, aggravated menacing, possession of controlled substances, and having weapons under disability.

Rosen has been reassigned to non-patrol duty while an investigation into the incident is conducted, Columbus Police Chief Kim Jacobs said at a press conference on Tuesday. While taking questions from reporters, she emphasized that while the video is disturbing, the investigation needs to run its course.

“Really, we don’t know enough yet,” Jacobs said after stressing that the video captured “only one angle.”

“You can’t always tell if contact was made. Video is recorded in 2D,” she said. “So there is potential that the camera does not see everything that occurred the way that it occurred.”

Still, she said, “using force against handcuffed prisoners is an issue.”

Officer Rosen’s conduct has been questioned before. He was one of two officers involved in a June 2016 shooting that killed 23-year-old Henry Green. The grand jury declined to indict either officer on charges related to that incident last month, WOSU reported.

Green had been walking with another man when he crossed paths with Rosen and fellow Officer Jason Bare, who were patrolling in an unmarked vehicle and wearing civilian clothes, The Columbus Dispatch reported. The officers said Green pointed a gun at the vehicle.

The two officers said they got out, identified themselves as police and ordered Green to drop his weapon. Instead he fired the gun at them, the officers said. They fired too. Green was hit seven times.

That description of events was later disputed by the man who had been walking with Green. That man said the officers did not identify themselves or give Green time to react, according to the Dispatch.

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LeBron James Plans Ohio Public School For At-Risk Kids

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Basketball superstar LeBron James plans to open a public school in his hometown of Akron, Ohio, for students at risk of falling behind in academics. 

The I Promise School will open for elementary students in the fall of 2018 with support from James’ family foundation, according to plans revealed on Tuesday. It plans classes for students in third and fourth grades during its first year, and will expand to include grades 1 though 8 by 2022.

The school will draw students who “are at-risk in reading and who are in need of additional academic intervention before falling further behind their peers,” the LeBron James Family Foundation said in a statement.  

James, the Cleveland Cavaliers’ star forward, was raised by a single mother. He entered the NBA in 2003 after emerging as a basketball phenom at St. Vincent-St. Mary High School in Akron.

James spoke about the school at an event Tuesday in a historic Akron theater. “Even though I was underprivileged,” he said, he was lucky to grow up with mentors, his mother and close friends.

“They would not let me get off course,” he said. ”A lot of the kids I see today in the community and all over the world are not lucky enough to have the same mentors and the same people around that can help their dreams become reality.”

The I Promise School aims to provide a supportive environment for students who lack guidance, James said. 

“We definitely understand how important it is to create an environment where our most challenged and at risk students feel safe, supported an cared for,” said Akron Public Schools Superintendent David James at the event as a wall of adults in “We are family” T-shirts stood on stage. 

A formal proposal for the school will be submitted for school board approval in October. 

James has previously offered Akron kids educational opportunities. He created 1,100 full-tuition scholarships in 2015 to the University of Akron for teens who completed an “I Promise” program that included goals for attendance and grades.

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Trump Rushes Into World Affairs

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WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump thinks he is a master of flattery, intimidation and dealmaking. He also apparently thinks he’s a New York natural at handling belligerent world leaders.

He may be right about the first three, but he is taking the planet on a hair-raising ride into a perilous unknown as he tests the fourth.

Almost overnight, Trump has transformed himself from a churlish, know-nothing isolationist into a wheeling-dealing Kissinger on Mountain Dew: speed-dating China, embracing NATO, fleet-trolling North Korea and dispatching Secretary of State Rex “Hoss” Tillerson to Moscow to talk nasty to putative pal Vladimir Putin.

“I’m flexible, and I’m proud of that,” the president said the other day.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has a bridge to sell you if you think this is only about Trump suddenly being moved to tears by dead Syrian babies.

It’s partly about turning around his dismal domestic polls. Trump is not just wagging the dog; he is wagging a whole pack of them. Have you heard much about Obamacare or the wall lately?

Talking tough has a related aim: to undercut the idea that Trump is a Putin plant, aided last year in the campaign by Russian bots, fake news sites and email hacks. 

Trump’s new embrace of world affairs also has to do with putting White House chief adviser Steve Bannon in a corner. Yes, the meister was laughing in the front row of Wednesday’s press conference with the head of NATO. But it was a chuckle of the condemned. Everyone in town saw the president’s dismissive distancing of himself from Bannon in Trump’s hometown newspaper, the New York Post. Everyone also has seen Tillerson, Defense Secretary James Mattis and National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster shred Bannon to pieces for the amusement of vengeful First Son-in-Law Jared Kushner.

But Trump’s real motivation, as with everything in Trump World, is ego gratification. It’s WAY more of a rush to get on the phone with new BFF Xi Jinping than to read rising Gallup numbers.

Like other presidents – only much faster, since he is so impatient – Trump has found Congress tedious, bureaucracy boring and the press corps somewhere between annoying and treasonous.

Barack Obama was no master of world affairs either when he entered the Oval Office. But Obama’s form of hubris ― to lecture the world on its moral failings ― was less perilous, at least in the short run.

Trump’s form of pride is the opposite. He doesn’t care about framework. He wants to make deals of all kinds, everywhere, Now. Yalta on cell and tweet. And that is a far riskier route.

Making snap judgments about world leaders with nuclear weapons ― or even claiming that you are making such judgments ― can complicate things quickly, and do irreversible damage in societies that don’t get that the tweet-paced palaver is show.

The possibility of fateful escalation in this social media age is extreme.

Sending the Navy to troll North Korean leader Kim Jong-un may feel like fun, but what if Kim decides to attack nearby Seoul with conventional weapons?

Trump’s developer’s penchant for wanting to make deals at any cost comes with an equally evident willingness to welch on deals if it serves his purposes.

But it’s one thing to stiff a subcontractor. It’s another to stiff, say, the Chinese. They have methods of getting payment that far exceed that of a floor-tile jobber on a highway in Paramus.

It looks as though Trump indeed made a quick deal on the phone with Xi, and it was a disastrously bad one if you care about China overwhelming the American economy with underpriced goods.

Maybe it’s a coincidence, but Trump has decided to stop calling China a currency manipulator; China, for its part, at the United Nations abstained from voting against an American resolution condemning Bashar Assad for his gas attack on Syrian civilians.

“I was honored by the vote,” the president said, as though accepting a gift from China. It seems that Xi also made some promises about helping out on North Korea by stopping coal shipments.

Were either of things worth the abandonment of the main American economic argument against China? Probably not. Did Trump run the traps of his national security team before cutting a deal with Xi? Probably not, since it all happened in a couple of hours.

Putin is a bully, but if you answer him with bullying of your own you had better be patient, consistent and unflinching. Tillerson demanded that Moscow accept responsibility for the gas attack in Syria. But back in Washington, Trump was milder in tone on that topic.

Like Henry Kissinger back in the 1970s, Trump seems to think he can corner Russia by siding with China. But unlike Kissinger, Trump knows next to nothing about either country. And a one-week flirtation with Xi is not enough to scare Putin. 

The last problem is that Trump mistakenly believes he knows the world because he has built hotels and licensed his name all over the globe. But in most places, he only learned what he had to learn to close the deal—which consisted largely of knowing which local officials to flatter, cajole or threaten.

Does he know anything about the history and culture of China, Russia, North Korea or Syria? Another businessman, Henry Ford, said that “history is bunk.” To Trump, that is an overstatement.

As for NATO, Trump stood in the East Room Wednesday and pledged his new-found love of an alliance he denounced during the campaign as a bunch of deadbeats who were crying wolf about Russia, but who were unwilling to pay to protect themselves.  

It’s an “enduring partnership,” Trump said Wednesday, and a “great alliance.” Jens Stoltenberg, the stolid Norwegian who serves as NATO secretary general, stood on the stage with the president. He didn’t smile much, which was smart. For there is no guarantee that Trump will say the same thing tomorrow.

Tomorrow is another episode.

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A 'brand new' Google Earth will arrive April 18th

Google just sent out invites for a pre-Earth Day event in New York City next week. In keeping with the obvious theme, the search giant is promising to take the lid off of a “brand new experience” for Google Earth.

VW aims to move past scandals with another self-driving EV

Volkswagen really, really wants to prove that it’s moving past its diesel emissions scandal, and to that end it’s unveiling yet another electric car concept following the I.D. and I.D. Buzz. This third model will be VW’s first crossover EV, blending…

Volvo's new XC60 is better than ever at not killing people

Volvo’s 2018 XC60 isn’t the newest thing at the New York Auto Show — it was actually unveiled on Geneva — but it was too Swedishly pretty not to spend time with. It’s still not clear whether this SUV will wind up in the United States, but…

Nintendo reveals Joy-Con battery grips and new color, standalone Switch dock

 Nintendo will offer a special battery grip accessory for its Joy-Con controller accessory, which will be offered in sets of two and add more life to the already considerable 20-hour runtime of the Joy-Cons using their built-in power. Nintendo is also going to add a new color option for Joy-Cons, a Neon Yellow that will make sure everyone knows you’re using a Switch and can’t… Read More