Good Morning Australia!! - Trump's campaign marinates in its first night failure - Turkey's purges veer into sector that clearly were not involved in last week's failed coup - Parents race to get their kids to the doctor after a multi-year vaccination scam - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

There is reportedly much internal tension in fascist demagogue Donald Trump's presidential campaign, after Melania Trump was caught plagiarizing her keynote address at the Republican National Convention from US First Lady Michelle Obama's speech at the 2008 Democratic Convention.  And worst of all, the passages that were stolen so flagrantly referred specifically to the value of hard work and honesty.  Veteran Republican Party strategist John Weaver said that "this was probably the worst first day of a national party convention" in more than 40 years.  The rest of the speeches from the night were criticized for racism and xenophobia, irrational anger, and debunked conspiracy theories about the 2011 Benghazi attack.

Turkey has purged more than 15,000 teachers in the wake of last week's failed coup.  Do you remember any teachers in tanks closing off the Bosphrus Bridge, or launching F-16 attacks on the parliament building in Ankara?  Neither do I.  However, Turkey's ministry of education accused them of links to the elderly, US-based cleric whom power grabbing President Recep Tayyip Erdogan claims was behind Friday's uprising.  The ministry also ordered 1,500 university deans to resign, and revoked the licenses of 21,000 private school teachers.  Around 50,000 soldiers, police, judges, civil servants and teachers have been suspended or detained since the coup attempt - leading to accusations from within the European Union that Erdogan (who once had his balls kicked by a horse) compiled vast "enemies lists" that were ready to be acted upon when the time was right.

The International Olympic Committee is holding off on a final decision over banning Russia from the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, which begin in just a couple of weeks.  There is growing pressure to ban the Russians over a report that documents wide-spread state-sponsored doping.  The IOC didn't hesitate to ban certain Russian officials and order retesting of athletes, and appointed a five-person disciplinary commission to determine its legal options and how to deal with the others.

The teen who slashed and critically injured four people on a train in Germany yesterday was a 17-year old asylum seeker from Afghanistan, which is doing nothing to help that country divided over the rapid arrival of more than a million such refugees in a year.  After police shot and killed the boy to protect the rest of the people on the train, Islamic State released a video purporting to show him making threats.  The little dead jerk - who apparently possessed an Islamic State flag - was reportedly upset that a friend back in Afghanistan had been killed, and took it out on German commuters.

Indonesia says its forces more than likely killed a militant named Santoso, who led an Islamic State-affiliated group called Mujahideen Indonesia.  This occurred during a gun battle on Monday.  Authorities are working for confirm the identity through DNA tests and identifying marks on the body.

Parents in Indonesia are racing to get their kids properly vaccinated after a fake vaccine scandal shocked the nation.  A criminal conspiracy of doctors, nurses, and suppliers passed off saline solution as vaccinations for diseases such as hepatitis C, hepatitis A, measles, tetanus, and whooping cough - all prevalent in the tropical nation.  President Joko Widodo is calling for calm and for allowing investigators to do their job on what is turning out to be a scam that ran for at least 13 years, but only became known last month.  Police have arrested 23 suspects so far.

Around a quarter million children are suffering malnutrition in the parts of Nigeria recently liberated from the terrorist group Boko Haram.  The United Nations children's agency UNICEF says tens of thousands of these kids will die if help does not arrive quickly.  People who live in the areas where Boko Haram ruled say they were without water, food, or sanitation.  And a charity group in the region says many people already died of starvation in terrorist-infested regions.

A tour bus on the way back to Taipei, Taiwan's main airport caught fire, killing 24 tourists from mainland China, plus the driver and a guide.  Police are investigating what made the bus suddenly crash into a highway barrier.  The flames raced through the vehicle so quickly, the people on board never had a chance.