Advocates warn kids' privacy at risk in GOP gun violence bill

A long-awaited GOP proposal to combat mass shootings has been receiving pushback from education groups and children’s privacy advocates over language they say could result in the “over-surveillance” of minors.

After months of deliberations, including meetings with victims and law enforcement officials in communities wracked by deadly shootings, Sen. John CornynJohn CornynAdvocates warn kids’ privacy at risk in GOP gun violence bill Senators concerned impeachment will consume agenda House passes bill aimed at reducing rape kit backlog MORE (R-Texas) introduced a Republican-backed “bill to help prevent mass shootings” on Wednesday.

The Restoring, Enhancing, Strengthening, and Promoting Our Nation’s Safety Efforts (Response) Act, which has several Republican co-sponsors, bundles some of the top GOP proposals to combat mass shootings into one bill. It would expand resources for mental health treatment, facilitate the creation of “behavioral intervention teams” to monitor students exhibiting disturbing behavior and offer new tools for law enforcement.

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The bill’s school safety proposals are a response to years of school shootings perpetrated by young people described as isolated and troubled.

But advocates have raised red flags over the Response Act’s requirement that schools begin monitoring their computer networks to “detect [the] online activities of minors who are at risk of committing self-harm or extreme violence against others.”

Under Cornyn’s legislation, nearly all federally funded schools in the U.S. would be required to install software to surveil students’ online activities, potentially including their emails and searches, in order to flag “violent” or alarming content.

The proposal would significantly expand the Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA), a 2000 law that is mostly interpreted today as blocking children from looking up pornography on school computers.

Privacy experts and education groups, many of which have resisted similar efforts at the state level, say that level of social media and network surveillance can discourage children from speaking their minds online and could disproportionately result in punishment against children of color, who already face higher rates of punishment in school.

“This is all very frightening,” an education policy consultant, who has been tracking the legislation, told The Hill. “There’s no real research, or even anecdotal information, to back up the idea … that following everything [kids] do online is really a way to determine that they’re going to be violent.”

Sources told The Hill they have been pressing Cornyn’s office over the issue, pointing out there is little evidence that increasing online monitoring can effectively reduce violence in schools.

The conflict highlights the high-stakes tradeoffs between children’s privacy and school safety in a country facing a seemingly constant stream of school shootings. “I think these people are well-meaning,” said one source who has been lobbying against the legislation. “I don’t think there’s any intent to do harm to kids.”

A previous draft of the bill, circulated in September and obtained by The Hill, would have asked schools to monitor children’s online activity “to protect against physical harm,” language that advocates panned as overly broad.

The version of the legislation introduced this week specifies that schools would be asked to operate a “technology protection measure” aimed at identifying children likely to self-harm or commit “extreme” violence, a more specific mandate that whittles down the number of offenses.

Still, Cornyn’s office has been rebuked as they sought endorsements for the bill from several education groups and advocates, according to multiple sources.

“We applaud Senator Cornyn for taking action on this critically important issue and introducing the RESPONSE Act,” Leslie Boggs, the president of the National Parent-Teacher Alliance, said in a statement to The Hill.

“While we have concerns with the bill as it is currently written, we look forward to working with him and his staff to ensure evidence-based best practices for protecting students are used, the school to prison pipeline is not increased, students are not discouraged from seeking mental health and counseling support and that students online activities are not over-monitored,” she said.

Social media monitoring has spiked dramatically over the past five years as the country works to get ahead of school violence. According to an analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice, 63 school districts across the country purchased social media monitoring software last year, a significant increase from six districts in 2013.

The efforts have been a windfall for the top software companies in the monitoring market, which have made millions of dollars as state and local governments ask schools to draw up more defenses against potential school shootings.

Critics of Cornyn’s bill say those monitoring programs don’t appear to have made a difference, instead resulting in more work for school administrators and less privacy for students.

“Schools that have chosen to purchase automated monitoring software are inundated with alerts flagging concerning behavior,” one privacy expert concerned about the bill said, “[and] some have even seen more than one hundred alerts per day.”

As it stands, the Response Act has received endorsements from the National Alliance on Mental Illness, Treatment Advocacy Organization, and a range of law enforcement organizations. And the office is continuing outreach to education and children’s privacy groups to solicit their feedback about potential amendments.

“I spent time with families and victims in El Paso and Midland-Odessa following those tragedies and pledged to work with my Senate colleagues on real solutions,” Cornyn said in a statement on Wednesday. “I urge my colleagues to come together once again to pass the Response Act to help prevent mass shootings and put a stop to this senseless loss of life.”

Sen. Joni ErnstJoni Kay ErnstAdvocates warn kids’ privacy at risk in GOP gun violence bill Vulnerable Republicans balk at Trump-backed drug pricing bill Hillicon Valley: Facebook launches ‘News Tab’ | Senate passes bill to take on ‘deepfakes’ | Schumer outlines vision for electric cars MORE (R-Iowa) in a statement said the bill “takes a step in the right direction towards making sure our schools are safe and well-equipped.” She noted that Congress should work towards “solutions” to violence “protecting our constitutional rights.”

Cornyn’s bill emerges as the GOP has found itself in a difficult position following the multitude of mass shootings this year, which have drawn new calls for gun control legislation and weapons bans that Republicans are unlikely to get behind.

There have been almost 300 mass shootings in the U.S. since the beginning of 2019, including several widely-publicized attacks with high casualties. In August alone, there were three mass shootings resulting in dozens of deaths and even more injuries.

Talks between a group of senators and the White House about potential mass shooting legislation have largely stalled amid the launch of an impeachment inquiry this month. But Cornyn’s bill has opened up the conversation again.

The co-sponsors include Sens. Martha McSallyMartha Elizabeth McSallyAdvocates warn kids’ privacy at risk in GOP gun violence bill Vulnerable Republicans balk at Trump-backed drug pricing bill The Hill’s 12:30 Report — Presented by Nareit — State of the states: Political fights heat up MORE (R-Ariz.), Thom TillisThomas (Thom) Roland TillisAdvocates warn kids’ privacy at risk in GOP gun violence bill Vulnerable Republicans balk at Trump-backed drug pricing bill The Hill’s 12:30 Report — Presented by Nareit — State of the states: Political fights heat up MORE (R-N.C.), Shelley Moore CapitoShelley Wellons Moore CapitoAdvocates warn kids’ privacy at risk in GOP gun violence bill Gaetz: Some lawmakers reviewed transcript at White House On The Money: Trump takes aim at China in UN address | Consumer confidence fell as trade tensions rose | Senate proposes billion for Trump border wall MORE (R-W.Va.), and Tim ScottTimothy (Tim) Eugene ScottAdvocates warn kids’ privacy at risk in GOP gun violence bill GOP worries it’s losing impeachment fight White House spokesman: Trump didn’t mean to compare his experience with ‘darkest moments’ in US history MORE (R-S.C.).

But children’s advocates say the bill needs to take other approaches to identifying children in need of help.

“There are a lot of kids who are suffering these days and there’s a lot of trauma out there,” one education advocacy source said. “We need to think of ways to find these kids that have problems and address those problems rather than escalating the situation by putting them under a microscope in the way that some of this language might do.”

Democrats ask appropriators to block funding for USDA move

Thirty-two Democratic lawmakers have signed a letter asking House and Senate appropriators to withhold funds in the 2020 budget that could be used to move the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s two research agencies out of the capital.

“With only a fraction of reassigned employees opting to relocate, we are extremely concerned that moving forward with this relocation will increasingly jeopardize ERS and NIFA’s ability to continue their critical work as well as cause irreparable harm to the federal scientific workforce,” the lawmakers wrote, using abbreviations for the Economic Research Service and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

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The USDA announced in June it would relocate the two agencies to Kansas City, Mo. The department’s Office of Inspector General has questioned the legality of the decision. 

The move has already had negative effects as employees leave the agencies. ERS was forced to delay or quash research after losing nearly 80 percent of its staff as employees fled rather than relocated. 

The House did not include funding for the move in the USDA spending bill, but the Senate version passed Tuesday did. 

“It is disappointing that this bill supports the administration’s ill-advised relocation of USDA research agencies. I have spoken out about this relocation effort and remain concerned about the loss of expertise and focus such a move precipitates at USDA,” Sen. Patrick LeahyPatrick Joseph LeahyOvernight Energy: Interior sees rise in revenue from drilling on public lands | Officials propose easing pesticide rule for farms | Trump prepares to formally leave Paris climate deal Democrats ask appropriators to block funding for USDA move Trump says remark about Colorado border wall was made ‘kiddingly’ MORE (D-Vt.) said on the floor. 

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According to data from the Office of Personnel Management, 85 percent of federal employees are already located outside the D.C. metro area.

But there has been a push by Republicans to further move agencies outside of D.C., arguing that they should move closer to their stakeholders.

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) announced in July it would move 27 employees to a new headquarters in Grand Junction, Colo., while another nearly 300 would be spread across various existing BLM offices out west. The move would leave just 61 of the agency’s 10,000 employees in Washington. 

On Wednesday, Sens. Josh HawleyJoshua (Josh) David HawleyDemocrats ask appropriators to block funding for USDA move Overnight Energy: GOP senators push bill to move most federal agencies out of DC | DOJ sues California to stifle cap-and-trade program with Quebec | Cutting wild horse population to cost BLM billion Hawley, Blackburn push bill to move most federal agencies out of DC MORE (R-Mo.) and Marsha BlackburnMarsha BlackburnDemocrats ask appropriators to block funding for USDA move Melania Trump makes first solo visit to Capitol Hill House passes third bill aimed at preventing foreign election interference MORE (R-Tenn.) introduced a bill that would move 10 federal agencies to as many states. 

Niv Elis contributed.

Team Corduroy or Team Velvet

Corduroy and velvet are similar, yet different. Corduroy is a ribbed, velvety fabric that’s usually made of cotton or a cotton blend. The width of the ribs (or wales) vary. Velvet or velveteen has a similar texture to corduroy, minus the ribbed effect. Velvet is extremely soft and smooth, and can be made of cotton, silk or nylon. These days you can find any wardrobe item in corduroy or velvet.

I have a complicated relationship with corduroy, and have never loved it for my own style. I wore it a lot as a child in the ‘70s, so a small part of me perceives it as juvenile. Another part of me finds it too industrial, rugged, grungy, and stiff (although I know it can feel soft, warm, stretchy and cosy too). I find it overly casual, because it can look more casual than some pairs of jeans. I’ve worn a few corduroy shirts, jackets, skirts and pants as an adult, but they were passed on fairly fast. I have zero corduroy wardrobe items in my wardrobe at the moment, and don’t mind that one bit. That said, I love hubs Greg in corduroy. He has three polished yet relaxed corduroy shirts that look amazing, and I bought them for him!

Velvet, on the other hand, is a fabric I like to wear because it has a dressier integrity. It’s also soft, pretty, and luxurious to my eye. I have three velvet items in my wardrobe, and I love them all. I wear them casually and during the day, so they are versatile. The velvet pants are worn with hi-top sneakers like a pair of corduroy pants, or dressed up with dressy knitwear and boots. The velvet jacket is paired with jeans, and the skirt can be anything I want it to be. I bat for Team Velvet.

The preferences of my clientele are probably evenly split between corduroy and velvet. A few of them wear velvet casually, but the perception that velvet is a dressy evening fabric remains strong no matter how much I try to change it. Corduroy pants are an easy sell because they are casual, comfy and a substitute for jeans. Corduroy is also a lot more forgiving of pet hair and lint, whereas velvet is a magnet for it.

Over to you. Do you bat for Team Corduroy or Team Velvet? Tell us why and no batting for both teams. If you can’t choose a side, sit this one out on the bench where I’m serving baked garlic ginger honey and butter chicken with wild rice and greens, and hot fudge sundaes for dessert.

Link Love: What to Wear to Get Things Done

I’m enjoying reading through all the instalments of the In Her Shoes series on The Cut website. It’s “a column about what real women wear when they need to get things done.” Here are 3 examples:

The shaving company executive who loves combat boots.

How a sports documentary filmmaker dresses for work.

What a Chicago-based art advocate wears to work. I love what she said when asked about her style evolution:

Fab Links from Our Members

Joy directs us to this blog post elaborating on the Pantone colours for Spring/Summer 2020.

Shevia thought this was a good, straightforward explanation of some of the issues with sustainable fashion.

Nordstrom just opened a huge store in New York City. Aquamarine wonders if this is an optimistic gamble.

Elpgal found this article about the Nordstrom dynasty quite interesting.

For the second year in a row, New Zealand lingerie brand Lonely is featuring a woman over 50 in their campaign. Jenni NZ says: “Good on them, I like seeing someone without a perfect body modelling lingerie, I can relate better!”

Vildy liked this article about Melbourne-based designer Kara Kupe, who is the woman behind the inclusive and sustainable underwear brand Bare.

Jess enjoyed this post with Fall outfit ideas and trends, and this post about experimenting with classic belts for Autumn.

kkards recently came across these two articles about how good Stitch Fix is or is not, and where it goes from here. She adds: “I’m interested because I’ve always wondered how far this ‘algorithm’ thing could go… especially now that Amazon seems to be getting into the game, and the rental business seems to be expanding. Based on both of these articles, I’m left wondering if there is a long-term future here. But then again, I’m not the target customer.”

Vildy liked this video review of 4 subscription services, including Stitch Fix, that goes into whether they “got” the reviewer or not based on how she was allowed to express her preferences. 

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Man Utd Team News: Injuries, suspensions and line-up vs Burnley

Everything you need to know ahead of the Premier League clash at Turf Moor on Sunday

Both Manchester United and Burnley head into their clash at Turf Moor on Sunday with points to prove after each side suffered a high-profile setback during the week.

United’s 3-0 home defeat against Tottenham had Jose Mourinho in fiery form afterwards, while Sean Dyche’s men were eliminated from the Europa League after a second-leg draw at home to Olympiakos.

Having lost two of their opening three games for the first time in 26 years, it is imperative that United get back on track with a win ahead of the first international break of the season, otherwise the next two weeks are going to be full of speculation relating to potential changes at the club.



Nemanja Matic and Antonio Valencia both returned against Spurs and should continue, although Matic in particular did look some way off the pace on Monday. 

Diogo Dalot is back in training after knee surgery and could feature soon, while Sergio Romero and Marcos Rojo are still out after summer operations.

Alexis Sanchez should be fit to start having returned from injury with a second-half substitute appearance last time out, while Phil Jones is expected to be unavailable having picked up a hamstring injury in the heavy defeat to Tottenham.



Neither team has any suspension concerns, with none of their players sent off in the opening games of this term.



The trip to Burnley is unlikely to feature more of the tactical tinkering from Jose Mourinho which saw him pick Ander Herrera as a centre-back in the 3-0 reverse to Spurs, with the Spaniard either being chosen as one of the substitutes or potentially covering for Nemanja Matic in midfield if the Serb suffers any reaction to his comeback appearance on Monday.

With Alexis Sanchez back, the Chilean ought to line up on the left of the attack, while Victor Lindelof and Eric Bailly will be battling for the starting shirt alongside Chris Smalling to replace Phil Jones at the back following the England World Cup defender’s hamstring issue on Monday.



Sean Dyche’s side have suffered a frustrating start to the season, with their Europa League campaign having seen them past Aberdeen and Basaksehir only to be eliminated by Olympiakos in the play-off round on Thursday.

They have also struggled in the Premier League – perhaps as a result of their extra workload in Europe – and have picked up only a single point from their first three games. Their opening day draw was followed by disappointing defeats to Watford and Fulham as the Clarets showed a defensive deficiency which barely existed at all during their excellent 2017-18 season.

Dyche’s biggest call might come in choosing a goalkeeper, with Tom Heaton having returned to full fitness following a calf problem. The former United goalkeeper has already played in their European loss against Olympiakos but Joe Hart has until now retained the gloves in the Premier League in the continued absence of Nick Pope after the World Cup back-up damaged his shoulder against Aberdeen in July.

Elsewhere the manager will be hoping to get his strikers firing, with defender James Tarkowski having scored two of Burnley’s league goals so far this season and Jeff Hendrick getting the other.



The match at Turf Moor kicks off at 4pm BST on Sunday, but there is no live coverage in the UK since the game between Watford and Tottenham was selected for TV long before Burnley’s Europa League adventures forced a rescheduling of this fixture. In the U.S. the game will be shown on NBCSN at 11am ET.



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Pogba's mind is somewhere else – Man Utd must be patient with World Cup winner, says Schmeichel

The Red Devils legend believes it will take time for the £89m midfielder to find his domestic form after such an emotional summer with his country

Paul Pogba’s mind remains “somewhere else”, says Peter Schmeichel, with Manchester United needing to be patient as they wait on the midfielder to produce his best form.

The Red Devils were expecting big things from an £89 million ($114m) asset on the back of his World Cup-winning heroics with France.

Jose Mourinho has challenged the 25-year-old to reproduce his international performance levels on a domestic stage, but is still waiting on that level of consistency.

Schmeichel says that process will take time, with Pogba working his way back to full mental and physical sharpness after an emotional summer with his country.

The legendary United goalkeeper told talkSPORT: “Paul’s come back from the World Cup having won it, he’s come back very early and it’s really difficult,.

“I’ve obviously never been all the way to the final but I went to the quarter-final and to come back with very little break, very little holiday after you’ve been on this incredible high – you find yourself in this state that’s been going on for three or four weeks and then it’s gone.

“You completely deflate and to inflate yourself again it just takes time. 

“Unfortunately, the football calendar is such that even the guys all the way to the final won’t have much of a break.

“Hopefully later on in the season there is an opportunity to give those players just a little bit of a breather – it is so difficult, honestly.

“Your mind is somewhere else, you look at the 11 months ahead of you and think, ‘This is the steepest mountain’ and at some point you need to just get away from it.

“Hopefully he will get that.”

Pogba has figured in all four of United’s Premier League fixtures in the 2018-19 campaign, netting two goals.

He also took the captain’s armband at the start of the season, with Mourinho making that show of faith amid reports of a breakdown in the working relationship between manager and star midfielder at Old Trafford.

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Leicester City vs Liverpool: TV channel, live stream, squad news & preview

Jurgen Klopp’s side will be looking to stretch their winning streak from three games to four when they face the Foxes at the King Power Stadium

Liverpool will be hoping to register their fourth straight win in the Premier League this season when they travel to face Leicester City on Saturday at the King Power Stadium.

Jurgen Klopp’s side are the only team left in the top-flight who are yet to concede a goal, registering three wins and three clean sheets out of three fixtures played so far.

Leicester, however, have manged to bounce back following an opening day defeat to Manchester United, registering two consecutive wins in their last two fixtures against Wolves and Southampton.

Game Leicester vs Liverpool
Date Saturday, September 1
Time 12:30pm BST / 7:30pm EST


In the United States (US), the game will be shown on NBC Sports and streamed online via the NBC Sports Live app.

US TV channel Online stream
NBC Sports NBC Sports Live

In the United Kingdom (UK), the game can be watched live on Sky Sports and streamed via Sky GO.

UK TV channel Online stream
Sky Sports Sky GO


Position Leicester players
Goalkeepers Schmeichel, Ward, Jakupovic
Defenders Peirera, Evans, Maguire, Chilwell, Morgan, Fuchs, Simpson, Soyuncu, Benalouane
Midfielders Mendy, Ndidi, Albrighton, Maddison, Gray, Amartey, Silva, Iborra, James, King, Choudhury
Forwards Iheanacho, Okazaki, Ghezzal, Diabate

Jamie Vardy is suspended for the game following a red card received against Wolves. Kelechi Iheanacho was given a starting berth against Southampton last week but drops to the bench for this clash, with Rachid Ghezzal coming into the team.

Additionally, Ricardo Pereira features in defence, having played further forward a week ago, and Marc Albrighton is back in the starting XI.

Meanwhile, Caglar Soyuncu is yet to make his first-team debut for Leicester after signing for the club in the summer, with manager Claude Puel hinting that the defender may be given some minutes for the club’s Under-23 side first.

Leicester XI: Schmeichel, Ricardo, Morgan, Maguire, Chilwell; Mendy, Ndidi; Alrighton, Ghezzal, Maddison; Gray.

Position Liverpool players
Goalkeepers Alisson, Mignolet, Kelleher
Defenders Clyne, Gomez, Van Dijk, Moreno, Alexander-Arnold, Robertson, Lovren
Midfielders Jones, Fabinho, Milner, Keita, Shaqiri, Wijnaldum, Markovic, Henderson
Forwards Sturridge, Firmino, Mane, Salah, Solanke

Klopp’s main injury concern is that of Dejan Lovren, who has yet to feature for Liverpool this season after recovering from a groin issue, which will mean Joe Gomez continues at centre-back alongside Virgil van Dijk.

The German previously stated that a return to the fold for the Croatia international will be likely following the international break.

Only one change has been made to the starting XI, with Naby Keita replaced by Jordan Henderson in the heart of the park.

Liverpool XI: Alisson; Alexander-Arnold, Gomez, van Dijk, Robertson; Milner, Henderson, Wijnaldum; Salah, Firmino, Mane.



Liverpool are priced at odds of winning 2/5 according to bet 365, while a draw is available at 15/4. A win for the Foxes is priced at 6/1.

Click here to see all of bet 365’s offers for the game, including goalscoring markets, correct score predictions and more.



Liverpool were far from their exhilarating best against Brighton last week when they edged out a 1-0 win, with Mohamed Salah slotting in the only goal in the first half.

Klopp’s side have already been named as a potential title challenger to Manchester City following their statement of intent in the summer transfer window, signing the likes of goalkeeper Alisson, Naby Keita, Fabinho and Xherdan Shaqiri.

Three wins after three games is Liverpool’s best start to a league season since the 2013-14 season, where they finished as runners-up, and though they didn’t score the surplus of goals they were expected to against Brighton, it was slip-ups against ‘lower table’ teams that were Klopp’s Achilles’ heel last season.

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The Reds managed to beat Leicester both home and away in the Premier League last season in narrow victories – 3-2 at the King Power Stadium and then 2-1 at Anfield.

Klopp has named the same starting XI in his first three Premier League games and may be tempted to switch his formation, after hinting that his players were still gaining match-fitness and needed time to regain their form.

Xherdan Shaqiri may be in contention to make his first start as a Liverpool player against the Foxes, while captain Jordan Henderson may be given the nod ahead of James Milner after an extended holiday following World Cup duty with England.

Why does Kyle Walker have holes in his socks?

The England international is known for wearing socks with large gaping holes in them, and the reason is more practical than you’d think

Manchester City and England defender Kyle Walker has often been spotted sporting socks with large, gaping holes on the back in a clear DIY endeavour.

They are, at times, a bizarre sight, a stark contrast to the normally crisp and uniform attire of kits on matchday and flashy boots.

So why does the right-back cut his socks with scissors, and is it merely a pre-match ritual? Goal explains why Walker – and a few other footballers – wear holey socks.

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Eagle-eyed fans on social media will have noticed the holes in Walker’s socks on more than one occasion – including the Community Shield against Chelsea in August.

The Man City right-back socks with cut-up holes several times last season, with many fans left puzzled as to why he’d be needing to take to his socks with scissors. Can he not afford new ones?

In reality, though, the reasoning behind cut-up socks with holes is quite practical and reasonable. Modern football socks are tight – at times, too tight – and some players’ calf muscles are simply too muscular and large to fit comfortably within the fabric tube.

And so some footballers, such as Walker, take it upon themselves to cut their socks up to relieve tension in the lower half of the legs, to prevent pain in the latter periods of a match.

Because footballers wear new kits for every game, they have to keep cutting their sucks up periodically.

Releasing pressure in the muscles also fends the possibility of cramps.

The practice of cutting your own holes in socks seems to have only taken off recently, and naturally, kit manufacturers haven’t realised that they need to expand the elasticity in their socks for their players’ comfort.



Walker isn’t the only player to take to the practice of cutting holes in his socks.

His England teammate Danny Rose did the same this summer in Russia, albeit not as sparingly.

West Ham defender Arthur Masuaku also did the same thing last season, while in Spain, Valencia’s Ezequiel Garay was ordered by the referee to switch his cut-up socks for an un-maimed pair.

Brasil Global Tour Venues: FedExField

With Brazil set to meet El Salvador in Landover, Chevrolet Brasil Global Tour takes a closer look at the setting of Tuesday’s clash

On Tuesday, Brazil face El Salvador on the final stop of this month’s Brasil Global Tour.

And the five-time world champions will feel they could hardly have been granted a grander stage than FedEx Field, one of the biggest stadiums in the National Football League (NFL).

Home to Washington’s American Football franchise, FedEx Field is affectionately nicknamed Big Jack after the team’s late owner, Jack Kent Cooke, who sought a replacement for their previous home, the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium.

It currently seats over 80,000 fans and has hosted a number of soccer matches, welcoming the USA, Argentina and El Salvador, Brazil’s opponents on Tuesday.

The iconic venue also played host to a number of matches at the Women’s World Cup in 1999.

A famous concert venue, the stadium has welcomed some of the modern greats of the music world, including the Rolling Stones, Metallica, U2, Bruce Springsteen, Coldplay and Beyonce.

Brazil meet El Salvador at 20:00 local time on Tuesday.

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US, China 'close' on some parts of trade deal

The U.S. and China are “close to finalizing” the first phase of a trade agreement after high-level officials spoke over the phone Friday, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative announced. 

U.S. Trade Representative Robert LighthizerRobert (Bob) Emmet LighthizerPelosi sounds hopeful on new NAFTA deal despite tensions with White House On The Money: Economy adds 164K jobs in July | Trump signs two-year budget deal, but border showdown looms | US, EU strike deal on beef exports Chinese, US negotiators fine-tuning details of trade agreement: report MORE and Treasury Secretary Steven MnuchinSteven Terner MnuchinUS, China ‘close’ on some parts of trade deal The Hill’s Morning Report — Presented by Better Medicare Alliance — Impeachment angst growing in GOP Overnight Defense: Trump lifts sanctions on Turkey | ‘Small number’ of troops to remain by Syrian oil fields | Defense official’s impeachment testimony delayed five hours after Republicans storm secure room MORE spoke with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He on Friday to discuss the first phase of a plan to end a bitter trade war between Washington and Beijing. The first phase of the deal would postpone an upcoming increase of tariffs on Chinese goods in exchange for Beijing drastically increasing imports of American crops.

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“They made headway on specific issues and the two sides are close to finalizing some sections of the agreement. Discussions will go on continuously at the deputy level, and the principals will have another call in the near future,” Lighthizer’s office said in a statement. 

The two sides are working to finalize language regarding the first phase of the deal, with both sides hoping President TrumpDonald John Trump Comey: Mueller ‘didn’t succeed in his mission because there was inadequate transparency’ During deposition, official says he made several efforts to advocate for Marie Yovanovitch Bolton looms large as impeachment inquiry accelerates MORE and Chinese President Xi Jinping can officially sign it at a summit next month in Chile.

China is still urging the U.S. to cancel additional tariffs on Chinese imports, people briefed on the Friday call told Reuters, while Washington is seeking a pledge that Beijing will ramp up purchases of U.S. agricultural goods such as soybeans.

China has already started increasing its purchases of agricultural goods. It issued waivers for 10 million tons of soybean purchases this week and is reportedly mulling approving an additional 4 million to 5 million tons of grains, including wheat, corn and sorghum.

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Trump has been quick to tout the potential deal as a victory for farmers as negotiations continue. 

“The deal I just made with China is, by far, the greatest and biggest deal ever made for our Great Patriot Farmers in the history of our Country. In fact, there is a question as to whether or not this much product can be produced? Our farmers will figure it out. Thank you China!” he tweeted earlier this month.

However, observers have cautioned that China has previously retreated from similar promises of agricultural purchases in the past and that mistrust will linger even if a deal is signed. 

“The Chinese don’t want Xi to move forward with this initial phase or this initial detente if they don’t get rid of the December tariff threat as well,” Stephen Myrow, managing partner at Beacon Policy Advisors, told The Hill this month. “No matter what they sign, they don’t really trust Trump.”