Good Morning Australia!! - A gun, an "unpopular nerd", and demagoguery add up to mass murder - New opposition to Trump's Muslim Ban - UK Citizens are standing up against Trump's bigotry - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Police in Quebec City in eastern Canada say the mass shooting at a mosque was likely a "lone wolf" attack, and the man of Moroccan origin who was arrested is now being treated as a witness.  A gunman now identified as Alexandre Bissonnette, a French-Canadian university student, allegedly entered the Centre Culturel Islamique de Quebec during Sunday prayers and killed six people - shooting them in the back as they knelt, face-down in typical Islamic prayer.  The 27-year old's social media profile reveals a wispy little guy who appears to be a decade younger than his actual age; he was considered to be "timid" and an "unpopular nerd" by classmates, and harbored right-wing, misogynist, anti-immigration and pro-Donald Trump views.  Bissonnette wore a mask during the attack and shouted, "Allahu Akbar!" possibly to mislead investigators but called police to confess 17 minutes after the shooting as he was overcome with guilt.

The murderous Quebec gunman's hero Donald Trump is running into more opposition to his bone-headed and unconstitutional ban on Muslims entering the United States.  Former president Barack Obama has broken his silence:  "The president fundamentally disagrees with the notion of discriminating against individuals because of their faith or religion," Mr. Obama said in a statement, adding that he is "heartened" by "citizens exercising their constitutional right to assemble, organize and have their voices heard by their elected officials is exactly what we expect to see when American values are at stake".  Trump's order, partially struck down by a federal court, bans entry to the US by people from seven predominantly Muslim countries where Trump doesn't do business.

Wall Street is turning on Trump's Muslim Ban:  Goldmann Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein said, "This is not a policy we support, and I would note that it has already been challenged in federal court, and some of the order has been enjoined at least temporarily."  The CEOs of Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, and JP Morgan issued similar, cautious statements.  Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg is on record opposing the man, and Starbucks has committed to hiring more refugees at its outlets around the world to counteract Trump.

Trump's spokesman is threatening US career diplomats who are using a decades-old back-door called the "dissent channel" to express their opposition to the illegal Muslim Ban:  "Given the near-absence of terror attacks committed in recent years by Syrian, Iraqi, Irani, Libyan, Somalia, Sudanese, and Yemeni citizens who are in the US after entering on a visa, this ban will have little practical effect in improving public safety," reads a memo circulated by hundreds of experienced diplomats.  White House spokesman Sean Spicer encouraged the federal employees to "either get with the program or they can go".  

There's no proof that Trump's racist order stopped any terrorism, but it is preventing a 15-year old student from Melbourne from joining the rest of his classmates on a trip to America.  Pouya Ghadirian, from Hawthorn East, tried to get a visa from the US consulate but was denied because of his dual Aussie-Iranian nationality.  Ghadirian's was born in Melbourne and his parents lived here for two decades.  "I was gutted and (US officials) knew that and I think they felt sorry for me but it was out of their hands," he told the ABC.  Other people caught up include a five-year old boy who was separated from his mother for 30 hours by US immigration agents, and an elderly Iraqi woman who was trying to visit her son who is a member of the US military.

More than 1.4 million people have signed a petition asking the UK Parliament to ban Donald Trump from entering the country.  By statute, Parliament must hold a public hearing with more than 100,000 signatures.  Number 10 says Prime Minister Theresa May will not withdraw her invitation to Trump because it remained "substantially in the national interest"; but it does show the rising level of disgust with the orange clown.

Israel's parliament is expected to retroactively approve 4,000 homes that were illegally built by Israeli settlers on Palestinian lands.   Despite the right-wing government's support, Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit says it is unconstitutional; it also goes against the Israeli Supreme Court's established rulings on property rights.

Poland has put the names of Nazi SS commanders and guards at the Auschwitz death camp onto an online database.  The government and Institute of National Remembrance (INR) are seeking to prove that this corner of the Holocaust was the product of Nazi Germany, and not Poland, which has grown sensitive to accusations of collaberation with the World War II occupiers.

Rights groups are condemning a Bangladesh government plan to move Rohingya refugees to what amounts to a sandbar off the shore in the Bay of Bengal.  Thengar Char is usually engulfed by several feet of water at high tide, has no roads or flood defences, and has reportedly been used by pirates in its short decade of existence.  "It's a terrible idea to send someone to live there," said a local official.  Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya have fled Myanmar where they have lived for generations but are considered to be illegal immigrants - Bangladesh doesn't want them either, and wants to send them back.

A guy tried to avoid paying the entrance fee to the Youngor Zoo in the city of Ningbo in China, so he hopped the wall - and landed in the Tiger enclosure.  It didn't end well, he's dead.  But he saved the entrance fee.