Good Morning Australia!! - Trump's team is having a hard time restoring the world's confidence in the US - A European right-winger runs into the limits of his big mouth - Australian Catholic officials make a startling admission - The Pope clarifies the value of good conduct versus good words - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

It's turns out that US fascist demagogue Donald Trump thinks that LGBT stands for "Let's Go Back in Time".  The White House rolled back protections for LGBT students, taking away the right of transgender students to use public school restrooms that match their gender identity.  Trump's administration says it should be a "states rights" issue.  Critics say it will result in a return to harassment and physical abuse of children who are different:  "Attacking our children.. is no way to say you support and respect LGBTQ people," said Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality.  During his presidential campaign, Herr Trump claimed he would protect LGBT hard-won human rights.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly are in Mexico City to discuss a range of issues including trade and immigration.  But Mexico is already balking at one of the more stupid ideas coming out of the Trump White House, deporting non-Mexican undocumented workers to south of the border, where they will be undocumented in a different country.  "We told the US that immigration policy can't be unilateral," said Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray.  The two Americans are basically running into the same static that Vice President Mike Pence ran into at NATO in Europe earlier this week:  No one believes them.  They criss cross the world to try and put out Trump's dumpster fires, but no one trusts they have the ability to keep the orange clown in his cage.

Dutch right-winger Geert Wilders has cancelled all public campaign appearances until the 15 March national election, after a member of his police security team was arrested for leaking his location to a Dutch-Moroccan criminal gang.  Wilder has made a career out of viciously bashing Muslims and migrants - particularly Moroccans - and thus must hide behind under 24-hour police protection, making the taxpayer financially responsible for Wilders' fat mouth.  The rise of nationalism has some expecting Wilders' xenophobic party to do well in the elections, but it's highly unlikely it will be asked to take part in a coalition government.

Bosnia is asking the UN International Court of Justice to reconsider its 2007 ruling clearing Serbia of genocide in the Srebrenica Massacre during the 1992-95 War in the Balkans.  The earlier ruling agreed the murders of 8,000 Bosnian men and boys was a genocide, but cleared Serbia because the killings were carried out by Bosnian ethnic Serbs.

North Korea is SUPER cranky.  In a statement, Pyongyang referred to a "neighboring country" - understood to be its only ally in the world, China - for allegedly "dancing to the tune of the US".  Beijing earlier banned North Korean coal imports in response to Pyongyang's missile and atomic weapons tests.  Also, North Korea is blaming Malaysia for the fatal poisoning of Kim Jong-nam at the Kuala Lumpur airport.  Malaysia is demanding North Korea give up four men suspected of taking part in the killing of Kim, the estranged brother of North Korea's dictator.

Pope Francis turned his ire towards capitalist excesses and very clearly said it's better to be a good atheist than a fake Christian.  In his Thursday homily in Rome, the Pope said, "The offerings, I remember them: All dirty.  All stolen from the poor.  I don't know you.'  That will be Jesus' response to these scandalous people who live a double life."  The pontiff also said that the "blood of Christ" redeems all people, not just Roman Catholics: "'Father, the atheists?'  Even the atheists.  Everyone!"

Sydney Catholic Archbishop Anthony Fisher said the church was guilty of "criminal negligence" in is response to child abuse committed by members of the clergy.  Speaking to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney, Fisher said:  "I think there were people that were just like rabbits in the headlights, they just had no idea what to do, and their performance was appalling."  Investigations around the world have revealed that senior church officials turned a blind eye to the plight of children and others sexually abused by predator priests and clerics, and used their authority to silence victims and protect the guilty.