Good Morning Australia!! - Trump sows evil, chaos, and stupidity by banning people who aren't terrorists - World leaders react to the US ban on Muslims - Australia's refugee deal with the US is clarified - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

With massive protests at airports across the US; a Federal Judge putting a stay on Donald Trump's executive order to stop people from seven Muslim nations from entering the US; and confused border control workers unsure of who to stop and who to let in, or in deliberate contempt of court: The chief of staff for America's oblivious bloated mentally ill man-child liar-in-chief said, "It wasn't chaos."  In fact, YES, it was chaos, and it was bigoted, and it was stupid.  The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) brought the case of a US military translator who was detained at New York's JFK Airport to the federal court;  US District Judge ordered that "No-one is to be removed" from the US or its airports until the matter is sorted out in court.  The next hearing is in February.

Trump's overly-broad restriction targeted refugees from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen, in the name of "national security".  Keep in mind that since 1975, not one American citizen anywhere in the world has been killed by a refugee from any of those countries.  Thousands of have been killed by jihadists from Saudi Arabia and Egypt - but those are two countries where Trump has business interests, unlike the seven listed on the ban where there are no Trump hotels.

The orange clown's ban was written so stupidly and broadly that it now only banned people with legal visas and green cards who had every right to be in the US, it impacts people with dual nationalities:  Thus, the UK's highest decorated Olympian, Sir Mo Farrar, was banned from flying to the US where he is a legal resident.  Mr. Farrar wondered how he would tell his children that "daddy might not be able to come home", because Trump's order that came "from a place of ignorance and prejudice" has now "made me an alien".  Iranian film director Asghar Farhadi will skip this year's Academy Awards despite his film "The Salesman" is nominated for best foreign language film. 

UK Prime Minister Theresa May who at first sought not to tell the US how to run its immigration policy has been forced off the fence with Trump's despicable treatment of Mo Farrar and others.  A day after declaring it a US internal matter, May now says she does "not agree" with Trump's order and will challenge the US government if it has an adverse effect on British national, and has directed two government ministers to call their US counterparts to express concern.  German Chancellor Angela Merkel called Trump to cite the 1951 Geneva Refugee Convention that calls on signatories - including the US - to take in people fleeing war.  Italy's Interior Minister Marco Minniti warned against "equating immigration and terrorism".  And EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said, "All men are first and foremost human beings, with their inalienable rights," adding, "It feels so strange that we need to restate this, just days after Holocaust Remembrance Day."

And just so the world is clear on this, this IS a ban on Muslims coming into the US.  Trump campaigned on it.  And Trump confidant and former NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani as much as admitted it: "When he first announced it, he said 'Muslim ban'," Giuliani said of the time when Trump came to him for advice.  "He called me up and said, 'Put a commission together, show me the right way to do it legally.'"  Guiliani's team wrote it so the US would "prioritize refugee claims made by individuals on the basis of religious-based persecution, provided that the religion of the individual is a minority religion in the individual’s country of nationality".  That means minority Christians get preference over Muslims, and that is direct violation of the First Amendment of the US Constitution.

Strangely.. Trump (for now anyway) will apparently honor the deal made by the Obama Administration to resettle refugees from Australia's Manus Island and Nauru detention camps.  Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull phoned the orange clown and later said, "We are very confident and satisfied that existing arrangements will continue," and, "It's quite clear that the administration has set out in the order the ability to deal with existing arrangements."  

France's presidential race just got shook up:  Left-wing candidate Benoit Hamon beat former prime minister Manual Valls for the Socialist Party presidential nomination.  Mr. Hamon has a manifesto including plans for a universal monthly income for all citizens, legalizing cannabis, and backing investment in renewable energy.  He has been compared to US Senator Bernie Sanders and UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.  This upset comes alongside a massive scandal foaming up around Francois Fillion, the candidate of the mainstream conservative party most recently calling itself the Republicans.  Two investigative journalists reported that the right-wing Fillion pocketed 25,000 Euros in petty cash meant for low level assistants while serving in the senate a decade ago, while his wife took half a million Euros for work a third investigative newspaper claims she never did. 

A top lawyer in Myanmar who has been an ally of leader Aung San Suu Kyi has been shot and killed.  Ko Ni was one of the few prominent Muslims in a predominantly Buddhist country, and spoke of the need to stand up for the rights of Muslim citizens, such as the oppressed Rohingya Muslim minority in the northwest.  It's not clear if that has anything to do with his murder over the weekend.