The Guardian's editor-in-chief Katharine Viner and columnist Gary Younge are taking questions between 10 and 11 a.m. ET on Brexit and what the EU referendum decision means.
- Your hands made me and formed me; give me understanding to learn you...r commands. (Psalm 119:73) As tuas mãos me fizeram e me formaram; dá-me entendimento para aprender os teus mandamentos. (Salmos 119:73) See More
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"Never, ever lose your sense of outrage," Bernie Sanders urged supporters in a speech that still had, well, plenty of outrage aimed at the current political system in the United States.
“Every time I leave they’re just like, ‘Be careful’. We have a fear seeing a cop, we have a fear seeing a cop behind us, in front of us. Watching you drive. They could pull you over and say, ‘Let’s go’… I live with the fear that I might never see my parents again.”
It was a monumental night as the UK voted "leave" in the #EUReferendum.
Britain has voted to leave the EU. The decision for a Brexit represents the biggest shock to the political establishment in Britain and across Europe for decades.
LeBron James: "I could use the rest."
One of the world's oldest wars is set to end after 50 years of bloodshed that caused more than 250,000 deaths and displaced more than 6 million people.
"Sooner or later, immigration reform will get done. Congress is not going to be able to ignore America forever. It's not a matter of if, but a matter of when." – Barack Obama, after a 4-4 vote in the supreme court suspended his executive orders that shielded millions of undocumented migrants from the threat of deportation.
"Technology has made us smarter, more capable and more productive. What technology has not done is make us wiser."
"We cannot continue to do nothing as more Americans are killed every day. At least one of our presidential nominees realizes this."
The message from Democrats trying to rally voters: if you're unhappy with America's immigration policies now, imagine what they'd look like under a Trump presidency.
"People have a strange urge to relate every single cancer tale they stumble across, as though we all want to hear about other people’s cancer woes all the time once we’ve had it. So I’m constantly worried about losing the people who best empathize with me — and when I’m not worried about them, I’m expected to worry about strangers, or about the possibility of a recurrence. I feel trapped in some pink hamster-wheel cancer hell greased with heartbreak. And there’s no exit."
"It's worse than a Jim Crow law." These twin Mississippi politicians are urging their conservative, southern black community to speak out against a house bill that could lead to discrimination and violence against LGBT people.