Good Morning Australia!! - Is your car's airbag actually protecting you and your loved ones? - Eight immigrants die in horrific circumstances - Where have we seen the new White House spokesman Anthony Scaramucci before? - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Five automakers have admitted replacing faulty airbags with identical units as part of the massive recall prompted by Takata airbags.  The consumer group Choice is concerned that these five may just be the tip of the iceberg:  "Although Toyota, Mazda, BMW, Lexus and Subaru admitted to Choice they made identical replacements, perhaps more worrying are the other manufacturers who continue to refuse to share this information with the public," said the group's spokesman Tom Godfrey.  After a three-month investigation, Choice determined that more than two-thirds of the 2.1 million cars recalled in Australia still have not had their faulty airbags replaced.  The faulty Takata bags are linked to 18 deaths.

An American horror scene in San Antonio, Texas:  At least eight people are dead, asphyxiated and baked inside an unventilated big-rig trailer that was abandoned in the sweltering sun outside a Wal-Mart discount retail store.  Authorities rushed 30 survivors to hospitals, but 20 of them are in "extremely severe" or critical condition - many with irreversible brain damage from the heat and lack of oxygen.  These people were from Mexico, Central and South America, killed by the criminal indifference of human traffickers.

At least one Jordanian is dead in a shooting inside a building within the Israeli embassy complex in Jordan's capital Amman.  An Israeli and another Jordanian are injured.  Israel and Jordan have had a peace treaty and fairly good relations since 1994, but the Jordanian street is tense and angry with Israel over the installation of metal detectors outside the Temple Mount/Al Aqsa Mosque complex.  The metal detectors have set off some of the bloodiest street violence with Palestinians in years.  Israel is responding with Security Cameras installed above the loathed metal detectors at the Lion's Gate entrance to the site.

There are hints that the European Union might sanction Poland after the ruling party passed legislation to consolidate its power over the once free and unbiased judiciary.  German Justice Minister Heiko Maas told the weekly paper Bild am Sonntag that "the independence of the judiciary is in danger in Poland", adding that "the EU cannot stand and watch inactively.  Rule of law and democracy are the bedrock of the EU".  Meanwhile, protesters filled city streets for an eight day and night since the ruling RWNJ "Law and Justice" party (PiS) passed the power grab.  They chanted ""Constitution!" and "Freedom, Equality, Democracy!" and urged President Andrzej Duda to veto the law, which he indicated he'd sign.

Ecuador has cancelled plans to build a border wall with Peru.  The four-meter wall would have run the border, separating the southern Ecuadoran city of Huaquillas with its Peruvian neighbor Aguas Verdes.  Peru and Ecuador have had rocky relations since the 1995 border war, but the idea of border walls has become shameful and discredited throughout Latin America because of the stupidity coming out of Donald Trump's mouth.  Instead, Ecuador's new Left-wing President Lenin Moreno will seek more peaceful solutions with his center-right Peruvian counterpart Pedro Pablo Kuczynski.

The first floating wind power turbine has been installed at the Hywind project off Scotland, and four more are waiting in a Norwegian fjord to be brought over.  They're scheduled to all be in place 15 miles off Peterhead, Aberdeenshire by the end of the month.  Once it's up and running, Hywind will be the world's first full-scale floating wind power farm.

The Internet has spoken, and it has decided that the new White House spokesman Anthony Scaramucci is the "Bone-itis" guy from Futurama.