Hello Australia!! - UK Prime Minister David Cameron announces plans to step down after losing the Brexit vote - Markets tank and some British voters are wondering what they got themselves into (or out of) - Is Google showing what Brits really think after voting for the Brexit? - Bernie Sanders says he'll vote for Hillary Clinton - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The financial world is unconvinced on the decision of British voters to end the four decade relationship with the European Union and set the country on what can be a very different course.  In New York, the Dow Jones index closed down 600 points, in its worst showing since 2011, joining the NASDAQ and the S&P500 in negative territory for the year.  This followed the German Dax shriveling 6.8 percent for its worst day since November 2008, and the Japanese Nikkei surrendering nearly 8 percent.  The Pound Sterling touched the lowest level in 31 years, settling slightly above that near US$1.375.  Financial advisors warned Britain that this would happen.  They were right.

EU leaders are urging the UK to quickly wrap up its exit negotiations, saying any delay would prolong uncertainty.  European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker stressed the "Union of the remaining 27 members will continue", and called a meeting of the leaders of those countries - sans UK Prime Minister David Cameron.  He's not invited.  Ouch.  While they talk of a quick and easy exit, however, EU officials do not to signal to nationalists in other member nations that they should attempt their own exit votes - so, expect Brussels to try and extract concessions.

PM David Cameron says he will step down by October, having failed to convince a majority that staying in the EU was in their best interests.  In a morning-after address outside Number 10, Mr. Cameron said:  "The will of the British people is an instruction that must be delivered.  It was not a decision that was taken lightly, not least because so many things were said by so many different organizations about the significance of this decision."

And yet, there is evidence that voters took it lightly.  Google Analytics shows a massive 250 percent increase in searches for the phrase, "What happens if we leave the EU."  Twitter showed numerous examples of people who voted "Leave", not expecting their protest votes against elites IN London to win - and regretting it in the morning.  The morning news shows were able to find these folks, just by stopping people at random in train stations.  Some claimed to have been duped by pie-in-the-sky promises from the "Leave" campaign, and UKIP leader Nigel Farage proved them correct:  On ITV's Good Morning Britain, the wide-mouthed xenophobe as much as admitted that a promised savings of 360 Million Pounds Sterling that wouldn't be going to the EU also wouldn't be going to the UK's embattled National Health.

Google Trends is also showing an increase in searches for people wanting to get out of the UK.  Since Friday morning in the UK, more Brits are searching for the phrase "getting an Irish passport" and "move to Gibraltar," the British territory on the south coast of Spain.  And Spanish foreign minister Jose Garcia-Margallo y Marfil is prodding London to share temporary sovereignty of the territory in order before returning it to Spain after 300 years of British occupation.  London is, of course, already rejecting the notion.  But the territory's economy is almost 100 percent reliant on the EU, and Brits on Gilbraltar voted 93 percent for "Remain".

If there's one group that's feeling particularly screwed by the Brexit outcome, it's younger voters.  Millennials and Generation X were robbed of their future with the European Union by the (insert your favorite expletive) Baby Boomers, who ordered a future that younger people didn't want.  A YouGov poll showed that voters aged 18 to 24 years were 75 percent in favor of Remain;  56 percent of those 25 to 49 years old still wanted to stay in the European Union.  But as the voters get older, the majority swings to "Leave":  56 percent of those pre-retirement folks aged 50 to 64 wanted out, as did 61 percent older than 65 years.  Thanks a bunch, Granddad.  SMDH.

Republican presidential candidate, orange clown, and fascist demagogue Donald Trump - who likely did not even know about the Brexit vote prior to a couple of weeks ago - took a bow for the result.  On a non-campaign related visit to pimp a Scottish golf course with licensed his foul name, Trump simultaneously said the Brexit was a "great thing" and blamed the outcome on US President Barack Obama.  Unfortunately, the world corporate media failed to call out the moron on his biggest fail:  He sent out a tweet claiming that Scotland was "going wild over the vote" and "they took their country back" - and was immediately roasted by people pointing out that Scotland voted resoundingly to "Remain", and will likely schedule another independence vote to break up with the United Kingdom.

US Democratic Presidential Candidate Bernie Sanders is slowly, slowly preparing his more zealous "Bernie or bust" followers for the inevitable choice in the November election.  In live network TV interviews, Sanders said he would vote for Hillary Clinton for President, to block Donald Trump.  It's not yet the formal endorsement the country has been waiting for, but it's something.  And it follows his admission earlier this week that he would not be the Democratic party nominee.  That's Hillary.  And it's time to beat Trump.