Good Morning Australia!! - Missteps before and after the YouTube shooting - US Republicans won't repudiate nazis - Indonesia's oil company admits responsibility - Long-delayed justice in New Zealand - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

San Bruno, California police effectively blamed YouTube for the deadly shooting at its corporate headquarters on Tuesday, saying that 39-year old shooter Nasim Aghdam did it because YouTube's policy changes cut off her advertising income off of her.. uhm.. "unique".. self-made videos about music, Persian culture, and her take on Veganism.  Aghdam's family had reported her missing from Southern California on 31 March, and warned she was angry at the company.  Cops found her sleeping in car near the tech HQ in the San Francisco suburbs the morning of the shooting, but let her go even knowing that she had been flagged as someone that might need psychiatric help.  She somehow gained access to an outdoor lounge and opened fire, wounding three people before killing herself.  Blaming the victim?  Allowing crazy people with guns to roam free?  Sounds like America.

Alongside the 50th Anniversary of Martin Luther King's assassination in Memphis, Tennessee, the Republican-led state legislature defeated a measure that would have condemned neo-nazi violence.  House Republican Caucus Chairman Rep. Ryan Williams sponsored the resolution decrying the hate groups last week, but caucus members told him they would not vote for it.  This was a watered-down version of an earlier Democratic Party version that specifically labeled white nationalist groups as "domestic terrorist organizations".  

Despite this, there are still some reasonable people in the US.  A jury ruled that former Bolivian President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada is responsible for the deaths of at least 67 protesters in his home country in 2003.  After ordering his troops to attack the protesters, he fled the country and has lived in the US every since.  But the US has laws allowing victims to sue for torture or extrajudicial killings.  Seven ex-government and military officials were sentenced to prison for what Bolivians call the "October Massacre".  The government of Evo Morales has been trying unsuccessfully to get the US to extradite Lozada to face justice.

China put out its list of 106 US products that will face a 25 percent tariff increase, including soy beans, passenger jets, beef, whisky, cars, and industrial chemicals.  This is in retaliation for the orange clown Donald Trump's tariffs on Chinese goods, but Beijing left a door open and didn't set a date the tariff would go into force - leaving that depending on the clown's next move.  Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, says that instead of being "easy to win", Trump's trade war will cost the US more than 190,000 jobs and 0.14 percent in economic growth.

Robert DeNiro really doesn't like Trump.

Austria's right-wing coalition government is proposing a ban on headscarves for girls younger than ten years of age.  The country's main Muslim group notes this is "absolutely counterproductive", as the vast majority of Muslim women who wear such headgear don't start until puberty.  The government - made up of a right-wing party and a far-right xenophobic party - claims it wants to avoid the development of "parallel societies".

After days of denials, Indonesia's state-owned oil company finally admitted it is to blame for the deadly oil spill in Balikpapan Bay off Borneo.  Four fishers died when the spill caught fire last week.  While Pertamina stalled, authorities needlessly detained and interrogated the crew of a ship which we now know was not responsible.  The oil company says one of its undersea pipelines was severed last week.

Prince Philip reportedly came through his hip surgery.  Buckingham Palace said, "The Duke of Edinburgh has undergone a successful hip replacement operation.  He is progressing satisfactorily at this early stage," adding, "He is comfortable and in good spirits."  Queens Elizabeth's husband will remain in hospital in London for a few days.

The New Zealand parliament unanymously passed a law to vacate criminal convictions for gay sex.  This will allow more than a thousand men to apply to have these ridiculous convicted removed from their records.  "This bill sends a clear signal that discrimination against gay people is no longer acceptable, and that we are committed to putting right wrongs from the past," said Justice Minister Andrew Little.  Homosexuality was decriminalized in New Zealand in 1986, but men who were convicted before that date still have the convictions on their records.