Donald Trump responds to LaVar Ball by tweeting he should have left UCLA players in jail

President Donald Trump responded to LaVar Ball on Sunday via Twitter, after Ball downplayed Trump’s involvement in getting LiAngelo Ball and two other UCLA Bruins basketball players back to the United States last week.

“Who?” LaVar Ball had told ESPN’s Arash Markazi on Friday when asked about Trump’s involvement in the matter. “What was he over there for? Don’t tell me nothing. Everybody wants to make it seem like he helped me out.”

UCLA freshmen LiAngelo Ball, Cody Riley and Jalen Hill, who had been detained in China on suspicion of shoplifting, landed in Los Angeles on Tuesday evening and addressed the media on Wednesday before being indefinitely suspended by the team.

LaVar on Trump’s role in UCLA incident: ‘Who?’

LaVar Ball downplayed President Donald Trump’s role in getting son LiAngelo and two other UCLA freshmen out of legal trouble following the players’ arrests in China, telling ESPN, “Everybody wants to make it seem like he helped me out.”

  • Sources: UCLA debates trio’s suspension

    Multiple sources told ESPN that UCLA officials are debating how long to sideline the three suspended freshmen players who admitted to shoplifting during the basketball team’s trip to China last week.

  • Trump, who returned late Tuesday from a trip through Asia, raised the players’ case with President Xi Jinping of China during a visit to Beijing last week. All three players thanked Trump during Wednesday’s news conference after Trump tweeted that the players should thank him for stepping in and helping gain their release.

    The players were arrested and questioned on Nov. 7 about stealing from high-end stores, including sunglasses from a Louis Vuitton store next to the team’s hotel in Hangzhou, where the Bruins had been staying before leaving for Shanghai to face Georgia Tech.

    UCLA athletic director Dan Guerrero said Wednesday that the players stole from three stores. They were released from custody after posting bail early Nov. 8 on the condition that they surrender their passports; they had been staying at a lakeside hotel in Hangzhou before flying home.

    “As long as my boy’s back here, I’m fine,” LaVar Ball told ESPN. “I’m happy with how things were handled. A lot of people like to say a lot of things that they thought happened over there. Like I told him, ‘They try to make a big deal out of nothing sometimes.’ I’m from L.A. I’ve seen a lot worse things happen than a guy taking some glasses. My son has built up enough character that one bad decision doesn’t define him. Now if you can go back and say when he was 12 years old he was shoplifting and stealing cars and going wild, then that’s a different thing.

    “Everybody gets stuck on the negativity of some things, and they get stuck on them too long. That’s not me. I handle what’s going on, and then we go from there.”

    Malcolm Young, AC/DC Guitarist and Co-Founder, Dead at 64

    Malcolm Young, guitarist and co-founder of AC/DC, died Saturday at the age of 64. Young had been suffering with dementia for the past three years, an illness that forced his retirement from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame-inducted band he founded with his brother Angus Young in 1973.

    “Today it is with deep heartfelt sadness that AC/DC has to announce the passing of Malcolm Young,” AC/DC wrote in a statement.

    “Malcolm, along with Angus, was the founder and creator of AC/DC. With enormous dedication and commitment he was the driving force behind the band. As a guitarist, songwriter and visionary he was a perfectionist and a unique man. He always stuck to his guns and did and said exactly what he wanted. He took great pride in all that he endeavored. His loyalty to the fans was unsurpassed.”

    Angus Young added, “As his brother it is hard to express in words what he has meant to me during my life, the bond we had was unique and very special. He leaves behind an enormous legacy that will live on forever. Malcolm, job well done.”

    The Young brothers lost their older brother George Young, the Easybeats guitarist and AC/DC’s longtime producer, in October at the age of 70.

    In an additional statement from Malcolm Young’s family, the band said that Malcolm Young died peacefully Saturday with his family by his side.

    “Renowned for his musical prowess, Malcolm was a songwriter, guitarist, performer, producer and visionary who inspired many,” the statement said. “From the outset, he knew what he wanted to achieve and, along with his younger brother, took to the world stage giving their all at every show. Nothing less would do for their fans.”

    As rhythm guitarist for the legendary rock band, Malcolm Young served as an indispensable foil to Angus Young’s arena-stuffing riffs. After forming AC/DC in 1973, the Young brothers would be credited as co-writers on every song the band recorded from their 1975 debut High Voltage through 2014’s Rock or Bust. That final album marked AC/DC’s first without Malcolm, who announced in September 2014 that he would permanently leave the band due to dementia.

    “We miss Malcolm, obviously,” AC/DC singer Brian Johnson said in July 2014. “He’s a fighter. He’s in [the] hospital, but he’s a fighter. We’ve got our fingers crossed that he’ll get strong again… Stevie, Malcolm’s nephew, was magnificent, but when you’re recording with this thing hanging over you and your work mate isn’t well, it’s difficult. But I’m sure [Malcolm] was rooting for us.”

    Malcolm Young last performed live with AC/DC when their tour for 2008’s Black Ice concluded in June 2010 with a concert in Bilbao, Spain.

    Malcolm Young, like his older brother George and younger brother Angus, was born in Glasgow, Scotland before the whole Young family emigrated to Sydney, Australia in the early Sixties.

    Malcolm and Angus’ first brush with rock stardom came courtesy of their brother George, who found global fame thanks to his band the Easybeats and their song “Friday on My Mind.” Although Malcolm’s two older brothers found success in the music industry, their father still made Malcolm work as a mechanic in a bra factory after leaving school at 15.

    “I’ve never felt like a pop star – this is a nine-to-five sort of gig,” Malcolm told Rolling Stone in 2008. “It comes from working in the factories, that world. You don’t forget it.”

    In 1973, Malcolm recruited Angus to form a new band, which the brothers named after the “AC/DC” electrical current marker they spotted on their sister’s sewing machine. After a few lineup changes, the Young brothers were introduced to singer Bon Scott by their brother George, who would serve as AC/DC’s producer on their early albums.

    Throughout AC/DC’s tenure, Malcolm and Angus Young served as the band’s main creative force, crafting the unmistakable riffs that would make AC/DC one of the biggest bands in music. Together, the brothers would create the music for hits like “Back in Black,” “Hells Bells,” “Highway to Hell,” “Thunderstruck,” “For Those About to Rock (We Salute You),” “You Shook Me All Night Long” and dozens more rock staples.

    However, Malcolm’s time in AC/DC was not without strife: A heavy drinker, he briefly left AC/DC in 1988 during the Blow Up Your Video Tour – his only absence from the band up to and until his dementia diagnosis – to go to rehab to curb his drinking problem. After a few months, Malcolm returned to the band and remained sober ever since. “I was not surprised,” George Young said of his younger brother’s sobriety. “When Malcolm puts his mind to something, he does it.”

    E Street Band guitarist Steven Van Zandt said in a statement to Rolling Stone, “Malcolm was the essential rhythm guitarist of the world’s greatest working class Hard Rock band. An irreplaceable loss.”

    Guns N’ Roses’ Slash told Rolling Stone, “Malcolm Young was one of the best ever rhythm guitarists in Rock n Roll. He was a fantastic songwriter and he had a great work ethic too. I toured with AC/DC on their ‘Stiff Upper Lip’ tour. I found Malcolm to be a really cool, down to earth fellow. The entire rock n roll community is heartbroken by his passing.”

    Eddie Van Halen wrote following Young’s death, “It is a sad day in rock and roll. Malcolm Young was my friend and the heart and soul of AC/DC. I had some of the best times of my life with him on our 1984 European tour. He will be missed and my deepest condolences to his family, bandmates and friends.”

    Megadeth’s Dave Mustaine, who regarded Malcolm as one of rock’s greatest rhythm guitarists, tweeted Saturday following Young’s death, “I have to go…I am losing it that Malcolm is gone. I hate this…” Kiss’ Paul Stanley added, “The driving engine of AC/DC has died. A tragic end for a sometimes unsung icon. One of the true greats. RIP.” Tom Morello praised Young as “#1 greatest rhythm guitarist in the entire history of rock n roll.”

    The Young brothers and AC/DC were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. With over 110 million albums sold, AC/DC is also the best-selling Australian act of all time.

    When Rolling Stone asked the Young brothers in 2008, Who runs AC/DC?,” Malcolm replied, “We both do, because we were there from the start.”

    Authorities continue search for suspect who killed cop

    An intense search continued Saturday for a suspect in the fatal shooting of a rookie police officer.

    The shooting happened shortly after 8 p.m. Friday in New Kensington, about 18 miles (29 kilometers) northeast of Pittsburgh. Officer Brian Shaw, 25, was shot in the chest after a traffic stop involving an SUV led to him chasing someone on foot, authorities said.

    Police later recovered an older model of an unoccupied brown Jeep Grand Cherokee, wanted in connection with the shooting. State police said Saturday that investigators know why the suspected shooter was pulled over but would not provide further details, citing the ongoing investigation.

    A description of the suspect has not been released.

    Shaw had served as a part-time officer in three other towns before joining the New Kensington police force full time in June. He was taken to a hospital after the shooting but was pronounced dead there a short time later, according to authorities.

    Police officers from neighboring towns continued to scour the area for the suspect early Saturday. SWAT teams and police dogs assisted.

    Authorities were offering a $40,000 reward for information on the shooting. The FBI has contributed $25,000 to the reward, while the U.S. Marshals Service offered $5,000 and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives will contribute up to $10,000.

    Dolphins waive Rey Maualuga following LB’s arrest

    The Miami Dolphins are parting ways with Rey Maualuga.

    NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reports the decision to waive Maualuga comes after the linebacker was arrested late Friday night on battery charges in Miami, Florida. Per records obtained by NFL Media, Maualuga remains in custody.

    The Dolphins later confirmed the transaction.

    Miami signed Maualuga to a one-year deal in August after 2017 second-round pick Raekwon McMillan tore his ACL in the Dolphins’ preseason opener.

    Maualuga had 23 tackles for the Dolphins this season in six games, four of which he started. Miami hosts the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday.

    Argentina intensifies search for missing submarine carrying 44 crew members

    BUENOS AIRES — An Argentine submarine with 44 crew on board was missing in the South Atlantic two days after its last communication, prompting the navy to step up its search efforts late on Friday in difficult, stormy conditions.

    The ARA San Juan was in the southern Argentine sea 268 miles from the Patagonian coast when it sent its last signal on Wednesday, naval spokesman Enrique Balbi said.

    The emergency operation was formally upgraded to a search-and-rescue procedure Friday night after no visual or radar contact was made with the submarine, Balbi said.

    “Detection has been difficult despite the quantity of boats and aircraft” involved in the search, Balbi said, noting that heavy winds and high waves were complicating efforts.

    Image: This 2013 photo provided by the Argentina Navy shows an ARA San Juan, a German-built diesel-electric vessel, near Buenos Aires, Argentina.


    Image: This 2013 photo provided by the Argentina Navy shows an ARA San Juan, a German-built diesel-electric vessel, near Buenos Aires, Argentina.

    “Obviously, the number of hours that have passed — two days in which there has been no communication — is of note.”

    The navy believes the submarine, which left Ushuaia en route to the coastal city of Mar del Plata in Buenos Aires province, had communication difficulties that may have been caused by an electrical outage, Balbi said. Navy protocol would call for the submarine to come to the surface once communication was lost.

    “We expect that it is on the surface,” Balbi said.

    The German-built submarine, which uses diesel-electric propulsion, was inaugurated in 1983, making it the newest of the three submarines in the navy’s fleet, according to the navy.

    President Mauricio Macri said the government was in contact with the crew’s families.

    “We share their concern and that of all Argentines,” he wrote on Twitter. “We are committed to using all national and international resources necessary to find the ARA San Juan submarine as soon as possible.”

    Argentina accepted an offer from the United States for a NASA P-3 explorer aircraft, which had been stationed in the southern city of Ushuaia and was preparing to depart to Antarctica, to fly over the search area, Balbi said.

    A Hercules C-130 from the Argentine Air Force was also flying over the operational area. Brazil, Uruguay, Chile, Peru, Britain and South Africa had also formally offered assistance.

    Thousands march in Zimbabwe to demand Mugabe step down, but when and if remain in question

    In the biggest anti-government demonstration in decades, thousands of Zimbabweans marched through the capital on Saturday demanding the resignation of the president, after a dramatic military takeover earlier this week.

    It was a remarkable display of public opposition in a country where, until this week, such gatherings were typically quelled with force.

    Thirty-seven years after he came to power, Robert Mugabe’s rule is now under threat from multiple fronts. First, on Tuesday, there was the late-night military operation that placed him under house arrest. Then, on Friday, his own party voted for him to be recalled. And Saturday, a diverse group of opposition groups marched through the city in a buoyant demonstration against Mugabe that felt like a citywide party celebrating his possible ouster.

    Mugabe’s fate remains unclear. He is embroiled in negotiations with the military and South African intermediaries, and so far he has resisted calls for his resignation. But Saturday’s demonstration nevertheless sent a clear signal that opposition to his rule is massive and diverse.

    The rally had the air of collective catharsis. For decades, Mugabe had targeted a broad array of his own citizens: white farmers whose land was seized, political activists who were arrested or simply vanished, even Harare’s street vendors, who Mugabe has tried to evict.

    Members of those groups, and many others, converged on the country’s State House, waving flags and signs that read, “Mugabe must go.” They shared the streets with tanks and smiling soldiers, who frequently stopped to pose for selfies.

    “If we had tried this three weeks ago, hundreds of people would have been dead in the street,” said Terry Angelos.

    It was the first time in decades that Zimbabweans had been able to protest Mugabe without fear of arrest.

    “It’s like our second independence day,” Martin Matanisa said. “For a while it’s just been oppression. This is the first time we’ve been able to stand here and protest.”

    Across the city, soldiers in armed personnel carriers observed the demonstrations, not intervening. They were greeted and praised.

    “Zimbabwe’s army is the voice of the people,” one popular sign read.

    When Maj. Gen. Sibusiso Moyo arrived to address the crowd, thousands of people grew quiet. It was clear that they were waiting for an announcement that Mugabe had agreed to step down.

    Mugabe presides Friday over a graduation ceremony at Zimbabwe Open University on the outskirts of Harare. The event marked Mugabe’s first public appearance since the military put him under house arrest earlier this week. (Ben Curtis/AP)

    “We are proud of what you have done and the solidarity you have shown,” Moyo said. “But you can’t achieve everything in one day.”

    The crowd appeared briefly deflated. With each day, it has become increasingly clear that if Mugabe does step down, it will be through a tense negotiation. The military has said it will not push him out by force. The state broadcaster later said that talks would continue on Sunday. The central committee of ZANU PF, the ruling party, is also expected to hold a meeting to dismiss Mugabe as its leader, but the legal consequences of such a move were unclear.

    Still, the demonstration was a remarkable step in Zimbabwe’s move away from the 93-year-old president, the world’s oldest head of state. He was once seen as a hero of Zimbabwe’s liberation from colonialism, serenaded in 1980 by reggae icon Bob Marley, who wrote the song “Zimbabwe” about the country’s struggle for independence.

    On Saturday, demonstrators tore down the sign from Robert Mugabe Road and stomped on it. At Zimbabwe Grounds, where Mugabe gave his first independence day speech in 1980, thousands of his opponents gathered.

    Members of Zimbabwe’s white minority joined the protests, many of them having lost their farms in violent government-led seizures. The land was frequently redistributed to Mugabe loyalists.

    Elaine Rich and her family were given two hours to flee their farm in 2004.

    “I’ve been waiting 37 years for this,” she said, carrying a Zimbabwean flag.

    “I’m glad with this show of unity to force Mugabe out,” said Joyce Mujuru, whom Mugabe fired as vice president in 2014.

    “We have to march to State House to remove the tyrant,” said Oppah Muchinguri, the current minister of water who has backed the military takeover.

    Still, some Zimbabweans expressed concern that the country was offering legitimacy to military and civilian leaders with a questionable track record.

    “We cannot afford to give another set of leaders a blank check or license to dictate,” said Ibbo Mandaza, a Zimbabwean academic.

    The military commanders who detained Mugabe appear to support former vice president Emmerson Mnangagwa as Mugabe’s successor. But both Western officials and many Zimbabweans have raised concerns about the prospect of a Mnangagwa-led government. In 2000, in a cable later released by WikiLeaks, the State Department said he was “widely feared and despised throughout the country” and “could be an even more repressive leader” than Mugabe,

    As of Saturday, Mnangagwa’s whereabouts remained unknown. It was his dismissal earlier this month as vice president which set off the process that culminated in Mugabe’s house arrest.

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    US warship collides with Japanese tug boat, latest mishap for the Navy’s 7th Fleet

    A U.S. warship collided with a Japanese commercial tug boat in Japan’s Sagami Bay on Saturday, marking the fifth time this year that a ship in the U.S. Navy’s 7th Fleet in the Pacific has been involved in a crash.

    The Japanese tug boat lost propulsion and drifted into the USS Benfold during a towing exercise. The U.S. guided-missile destroyer sustained minimal damage, and there were no reported injuries on either vessel, according to a press release from the U.S. Navy’s 7th Fleet.

    The USS Benfold, which is awaiting a full damage assessment, remains at sea under its own power. The incident will be investigated, the 7th Fleet said.

    Here’s a look at previous crashes involving U.S. Navy warships in 2017, including two deadly collisions that left 17 sailors dead:

    Jan. 31: The USS Antietam runs aground off coast of Japan

    The USS Antietam ran aground off the coast of Japan on Jan. 31, damaging its propellers and spilling oil into the water.

    The guided-missile destroyer grounded near the U.S. Naval base in Yokosuka, Japan, after anchoring out in high winds, the Navy Times reported.

    PHOTO: The U.S. Navys guided missile cruiser USS Antietam (CG-54) is seen docked at a port in Manila, March 14, 2016. Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images
    The U.S. Navy’s guided missile cruiser USS Antietam (CG-54) is seen docked at a port in Manila, March 14, 2016.

    The crew noticed the ship was dragging its anchor before getting it back underway, according to the Navy Times, adding that the crew then felt the ship shudder and lose pitch control of its propellers.

    About 1,100 gallons of oil were dumped into the Tokyo Bay, the Navy Times reported. No one was injured.

    A Navy investigation revealed that the former Capt. Joseph Carrian of the USS Antietam was “ultimately responsible” for the ship’s running aground, causing an estimated $4.2 million in damage, according to Stars and Stripes.

    May 9: The USS Lake Champlain collides with South Korean fishing boat

    The USS Lake Champlain, also a guided-missile cruiser, collided with a South Korean fishing boat in the Sea of Japan May 9.

    The warship was engaged in routine training when it collided with the 9.8-ton fishing boat off South Korea’s east coast, according to The Associated Press.

    PHOTO: An F/A-18E Super Hornet lands on the flight deck of the USS Carl Vinson and the USS Lake Champlain (CG 57) (L) and the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Wayne E. Meyer (DDG 108), May 3, 2017, in the western Pacific Ocean. Sean M. Castellano/U.S. Navy via Getty Images
    An F/A-18E Super Hornet lands on the flight deck of the USS Carl Vinson and the USS Lake Champlain (CG 57) (L) and the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Wayne E. Meyer (DDG 108), May 3, 2017, in the western Pacific Ocean.

    No one was injured in the incident.

    The warship tried to alert the fishing boat before the collision but it was too late.

    June 17: The USS Fitzgerald collides with a Philippine container ship

    Seven U.S. sailors were killed when the USS Fitzgerald collided with Philippine-flagged container ship in the middle of the night off the coast of Yokosuuka, Japan, June 17.

    The destroyer was operating about 56 nautical miles southwest of Yokosuka when it collided with the ACX Crystal. Most of the Fitzgerald’s 300 crew members on board would have been asleep at the time, The Associated Press reported.

    The Fitzgerald sustained damage on its starboard side and experienced flooding in some spaces as a result of the collision, according to the Navy.

    PHOTO: The USS Fitzgerald sits in Dry Dock 4 at Fleet Activities Yokosuka, Japan to continue repairs and assess damage sustained from its June 17, 2017 collision with a merchant vessel. U.S. Navy via Getty Images
    The USS Fitzgerald sits in Dry Dock 4 at Fleet Activities Yokosuka, Japan to continue repairs and assess damage sustained from its June 17, 2017 collision with a merchant vessel.

    All seven sailors who died were initially missing after the collision and found in the flooded quarters after the destroyer returned to port, a Navy official told ABC News. Those quarters flooded within 90 seconds of the collision.

    The area is often busy with sea traffic, with as many as 400 ships passing through it every day, according to Japan’s coast guard.

    The Navy last week relieved the USS Fitzgerald’s commanding officer, executive officer and senior enlisted sailor for alleged mistakes that led to the deadly crash.

    Aug. 21: The USS John S. McCain collides with a merchant ship

    Ten U.S. sailors were killed when the USS John S. McCain, named after the father and grandfather of Vietnam war hero Sen. John S. McCain III, R-Ariz., collided with commercial vessel Alnic MC in waters east of Singapore on Aug. 21, according to the Navy.

    The collision occurred east of the Strait of Malacca around 6:24 a.m. Japan Standard Time. The guided-missile destroyer was on its way for a routine port visit in Singapore, the Navy said in a statement.

    “It was one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world,” said Steve Ganyard, an ABC News contributor, retired Marine colonel and a former deputy assistant secretary of state.

    “One-third of all maritime shipping goes through here,” Ganyard said. “So there were probably extenuating circumstances but no doubt, as we saw in the Fitzgerald, there was probably human error involved, as well.”

    PHOTO: Tugboats from Singapore assist the USS John S. McCain as it steers towards Changi Naval Base in Singapore, after a collision with a merchant ship, Aug. 21, 2017.p itemprop=
    ” /Joshua Fulton/AFP/Getty Images
    Tugboats from Singapore assist the USS John S. McCain as it steers towards Changi Naval Base in Singapore, after a collision with a merchant ship, Aug. 21, 2017.

    The warship suffered significant damage to the hull, causing flooding in nearby departments, including the crew berthing, machinery and communications rooms, the Navy said.

    “This leaves a real gap in the Pacific fleet’s capabilities at a time when tensions with North Korea are high,” Ganyard said.

    All 10 sailors who died were initially missing and their remains were later found inside sealed compartments of the warship’s damaged hull. Another five sailors sustained non-life-threatening injuries, the Navy said.

    The crew consisted of 23 officers, 24 petty officers and 291 sailors, according to the Navy’s website. Its home port is in Yokosuka, Japan.

    ABC News’ Lucien Bruggeman and Elizabeth McLaughlin contributed to this report.

    Bill Clinton, Roy Moore and the Power of Social Identity

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    How a partisan lens leads people to different interpretations of the same facts.

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    A view of screens in a live feed to the White House briefing room minutes before President Clinton went on the air in August 1998 to acknowledge having had an inappropriate relationship with Monica Lewinsky.CreditStephen Crowley/The New York Times

    By

    Nov. 17, 2017

    It may feel to Americans that an intense state of us-versus-them is something new, but it’s not. People have been using party as a lens to filter information for decades and beyond.

    In the 1990s, when President Clinton was facing numerous accusations of sexual misconduct, people’s reactions reflected their partisanship (though, long after the fact, liberals are starting to rue this).

    In a CBS News Poll taken in January 1998, 34 percent of Republicans thought Mr. Clinton should be impeached for encouraging Monica Lewinsky, with whom he’d an affair, to protect him by lying under oath, while only 9 percent of Democrats thought this. Similarly, 43 percent of Democrats thought a more reasonable resolution to the matter would be for Mr. Clinton to admit what he had done and apologize (only 23 percent of Republicans thought this was a reasonable outcome).

    Democrats today may say their reaction to a similar situation would be different than it was in the 1990s — and Thursday’s revelation about Al Franken may give them a chance to prove it — but the power of social identities leaves room fordoubt. The way in which people respond to such accusations tends to depend on whether the accused is on one’s “team” or not.

    For most of us, the groups we identify with shape the way we see ourselves — and others. Are you a Browns fan or a Steelers fan?A New Yorker or an Angelino? Do you root for Texas or Oklahoma?

    It’s not just sports and geography that shape our group identities. Historically, battles between social classes, ethnicities and religions have invoked the same in-group favoritism and out-group derogation.

    A key to understanding the sway of social identities is separation: the ability to distinguish members of one group from another through a shortcut based on something like team colors, languages or accents, race or geography. The separation makes it easier to create and intensify a sense of shared identity among group members. It helps people in the groups feel connected and to act on behalf of one another, often to strengthen or preserve the group and the pride derived from membership in it.

    If people receive information that conflicts with their social identities, they will often reject that information, even if it is accepted or offered by witnesses, experts or institutions unaffiliated with either side.

    Political scientists for decades have thought about party identification as simultaneously being a summary of a person’s positions on issues and also an expression of group identity. An easy way to appreciate how partisanship works as a lens through which people see the world is to consider how people react to the objective state of the nation’s economy.

    Over the course of 2016, the nation’s economy grew by about 1.6 percent. When the American National Election Study asked people in the fall of 2016 if they thought the economy had gotten better, stayed the same or become worse over the last year, a familiar pattern emerged. Nearly half of self-described strong or weak Democrats (45 percent) thought things had gotten better over the last year. (They were of course evaluating the economy under the presidency of a Democrat.) Nearly half of Republicans took the opposite position, believing that the economy had gotten worse over the last year, while only 11 percent thought things had gotten better.

    Or consider the case of Colin Kaepernick, the former San Francisco 49ers quarterback who refused to stand during the national anthem in the fall of 2016 because of what he said was police brutality toward African-Americans.

    In September 2016, the HBO Real Sports/Marist Poll conducted a survey that illustrated the partisan divide: 36 percent of Democrats and 71 percent of Republicans believed that N.F.L. players should be required by the league to stand for the anthem. The controversy became more connected to partisanship when early in the season President Trump drew the nation’s attention to kneeling players, saying owners should fire players who disrespect the flag.

    In the wake of these comments, HBO Sports repeated the poll. Views about whether players should be required to stand for the national anthem had polarized further. More Republicans, 82 percent in all, now believed players should be made to stand while only 27 percent of Democrats thought so. The gap between support in the two parties widened by 20 points — from a gap of 35 to a whopping 55-point spread.

    Mr. Trump’s involvement in the N.F.L. protests signaled to the few people on both sides who hadn’t already sorted based on political party that it was time to apply their partisan lenses to the problem. He activated the “us” versus “them” framework, one that he repeatedly invoked in his campaign, even in a controversy that was already highly polarized. Helping people recognize that they are a part of an in-group and that people unlike them are in the out-group is part of what gives social identities power.

    This is also why reactions to the recent wave of accusations about sexual harassment and assault can differ depending on who is being accused. In some cases, like the accusations against the Alabama Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore, people’s partisan group-based identities have been activated. But in other cases, like the accusations against those in Hollywood, there’s a different dynamic. While there may be some disdain among the right about Hollywood liberalism, there is no “us versus them” identity to activate — liberals tend not to see Hollywood as part of their identity.

    In the case of Mr. Moore, his Alabama supporters and voters have rallied to his defense, saying that he was “innocent until proven guilty” and that the accusations are sponsored by Democrats — the “them” to their “us.” There were some similar expressions of innocence until proven guilty regarding Hollywood celebrities, but in many cases those accused have quickly lost jobs, entered therapy and often expressed regret. Democrats in Congress have so far shown little willingness to defend Mr. Franken, although President Trump has criticized his conduct.

    Mr. Franken has apologized, yet he may still face ethics sanctions, and the effect on his political career remains unclear. Mr. Moore may ultimately end up regretful and unemployed, but the way in which people reacted to these accusations illustrates the power of social identity and how it is possible for people to live in the same communities and believe very different things are real.


    Lynn Vavreck, a professor of political science at U.C.L.A., is a co-author of the coming “Identity Crisis: The 2016 Presidential Campaign and the Battle for the Meaning of America.” Follow her on Twitter: @vavreck.

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