Today in History: September 1, World War II starts with invasion of Poland

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Today is Monday, Sept. 1, the 244th day of 2025. There are 121 days left in the year.

Today in history:

On Sept. 1, 1939, Nazi Germany invaded Poland, an event regarded as the start of World War II.

Also on this date:

In 1715, following a reign of 72 years, King Louis XIV of France died four days before his 77th birthday; he was succeeded by his five year-old great-grandson, Louis XV.

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In 1897, the first section of Boston’s new subway was opened, creating the first underground rapid transit system in North America.

In 1914, the passenger pigeon, once one of the most abundant bird species on earth, went extinct as the last known example, named Martha, died in captivity at the Cincinnati Zoo.

In 1923, the Japanese cities of Tokyo and Yokohama were devastated by an earthquake that claimed some 140,000 lives.

In 1964, pitcher Masanori Murakami of the San Francisco Giants became the first Japanese baseball player to play in a Major League Baseball game.

In 1969, a coup in Libya brought Moammar Gadhafi to power.

In 1972, American Bobby Fischer won the international chess crown in Reykjavik, Iceland, as Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union resigned before the resumption of their 21st and final game.

In 1983, 269 people were killed when a Korean Air Lines Boeing 747 was shot down by a Soviet jet fighter after the airliner entered Soviet airspace.

In 1985, a U.S.-French expedition located the wreckage of the Titanic on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean roughly 400 miles off the coast of Newfoundland.

In 2004, Islamic terrorists took more than a thousand people hostage in a school in Beslan, North Ossetia, Russia; the siege would end three days later in gunfire and explosions, leaving 334 people dead — more than half of them children.

In 2015, invoking “God’s authority,” Rowan County, Kentucky, Clerk Kim Davis denied marriage licenses to gay couples again in direct defiance of the federal courts and vowed not to resign, even under the pressure of steep fines or jail. (Davis would spend five days in jail as a result, and is currently appealing a ruling ordering her to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in related legal fees.)

Today’s Birthdays:

Attorney and law professor Alan Dershowitz is 87.
Comedian-actor Lily Tomlin is 86.
Singer Barry Gibb is 79.
Talk show host Dr. Phil McGraw is 75.
Singer Gloria Estefan is 68.
TV host-author Padma Lakshmi is 55.
Actor Ricardo Antonio Chavira is 54.
Fashion designer Rachel Zoe is 54.
Actor Scott Speedman is 50.
Composer-producer Ludwig Göransson is 41.
Actor-singer Zendaya is 29.

What motivated the Annunciation shooter? We may never know

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It has become a hauntingly routine paradox in the aftermath of horrific shootings.

An assailant leaves piles of evidence that investigators scrutinize. But law enforcement officials are often left with more questions than answers as they seek to determine a motive.

Officials in Minneapolis were bracing for that outcome as they examined the writings and social media posts of the person they say opened fire through the window of a church packed with schoolchildren Wednesday, killing two.

Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara (L) listens as acting U.S. Attorney Joseph Thompson (R) speaks during a law enforcement briefing following a mass shooting at Annunciation Catholic School on August 28, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. According to Minneapolis Police, a gunman fired through the windows of the Annunciation Church at worshippers sitting in pews during a Catholic school Mass, killing two children and injuring at least 17 others. The gunman reportedly died at the scene from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

“We will follow all of the evidence to its logical conclusion,” Brian O’Hara, the Minneapolis police chief, told reporters Thursday. “This may not ultimately provide the answers that our public is looking for.”

Robin Westman, 23, carried out the attack and died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, authorities said. The attacker left behind a lengthy suicide note, journal entries and scribbling on the weapons used in the ambush at the Church of the Annunciation, which is affiliated with an adjacent Catholic school.

The content includes disparaging messages about President Donald Trump, Christians, Black people, Hispanic people, Jews and Israel.

“The shooter expressed hate toward every group imaginable,” said Joseph Thompson, the acting U.S. attorney in Minnesota. “The shooter’s heart was full of hate.”

The sprawling nature of the assailant’s rantings and grievances led government officials and other observers to zero in on single pieces of information immediately after the attack, which also injured 16 children and three adult parishioners.

FBI Director Kash Patel characterized the incident as a “hate crime targeting Catholics.” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem drew attention to a message threatening violence toward the president and to the shooter’s gender identity. According to court records, when Westman was 17, she filed a petition to legally change her name to Robin, noting that she identified as female.

Social media was filled with rampant speculation about the shooter’s gender identity and whether the attacker’s recent work at a cannabis dispensary and previous attendance at the school adjacent to the church had factored into a motive.

But the only clear finding so far, law enforcement officials said, was that the attacker had come to idolize mass shooters, particularly those who have killed children.

A dark pattern

Jillian Peterson, a professor of criminology at Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota, who studies gun violence, said the facts that have emerged so far fit a pattern. Shooters who target children in these attacks tend to be young, isolated, depressed and angry individuals who become obsessed with previous slayings that have generated extensive news coverage.

“It’s sort of this self-hatred that turns outward, and then you have this really angry person who plans to go out in a blaze of glory,” Peterson said.

As communities process the shock and grief of these shootings, she added, there is often a natural desire to make sense of the attacker’s state of mind and intent.

“We want to be able to say, ‘Oh, this person was psychotic, this person was racist, this person was homophobic, and just put a label on it,’” Peterson said. “In many cases, the motive is always the same: to kill as many people as possible” and generate splashy headlines.

In an era of diminishing trust in government institutions and the media, conspiracy theories about high-profile crimes can get significant traction in the absence of a conclusive motive.

The teenager who fatally shot 19 children and two teachers in Uvalde, Texas, had behaved in alarming ways before the 2022 tragedy. But to this day, the gunman’s motivations remain unclear.

After a former student opened fire at a Christian school in Nashville, Tennessee, in 2023, killing three children and three adults, conservative commentators were convinced that the fact that the assailant had identified as transgender played a role in the crime. But authorities have not been able to draw a clear link, instead emphasizing the assailant’s desire for infamy and fixation on other mass shootings.

Flowers and candles are placed outside the Abundant Life Christian School Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2024 in Madison, Wis., following a shooting on Monday. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

After a 15-year-old girl killed two people and wounded six at a Christian school in Wisconsin late last year, authorities said she had become obsessed with previous school shootings. But what motivated the teenager, who died during the attack, was never established.

No clear answers

When shooters are taken into custody and agree to talk about their crimes, their motives can be even murkier.

Early reports from officials about the Minnesota man who prosecutors say opened fire on two state legislators in June appeared to indicate that the suspect was motivated by anti-abortion views.

But later, the suspect, who is facing trial for murder and other crimes, provided a set of confounding explanations. In a letter to the FBI, he called the attack part of a dark plot involving Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota and competition for the state’s U.S. Senate seats.

More recently, he told reporters the crime had to do with his theories about COVID-19 vaccines.

Mary Ellen O’Toole, a retired FBI agent who spent years assembling profiles of infamous criminals, said that sometimes attackers themselves seem unable to make sense of their actions.

“When the offender survives and you go in and talk to them and say: ‘What were your motives?’ they oftentimes cannot articulate what they were,” said O’Toole, a forensic sciences professor at George Mason University.

Understanding signs

While the question of motive certainly matters — particularly if a defendant goes on trial — a more pressing one is how to identify and respond to risk factors.

O’Toole and Peterson said these types of shooters often are consumed with rage in a way that becomes apparent to loved ones and acquaintances. Men between the ages of 15 and 25 appear to be particularly susceptible to becoming fixated with mass carnage, O’Toole said.

In the months ahead, O’Toole said, federal investigators will strive to assemble a detailed portrait of the Minneapolis church shooter. Their main goal will not be to understand precisely what motivated the attacker, but rather the evolution of the shooter’s radicalization and any warning signs that may have gone unheeded.

“They want to be able to use this information to prevent the next one,” she said. “I can tell you there are already people that are considering carrying out a mass shooting based on what they’ve seen” in Minneapolis.

People arrive before mass at Annunciation Church and School on Aug. 30, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The church service is the first to occur since a mass shooting took place there earlier this week. According to Minneapolis Police, a gunman fired through the windows of the Annunciation Church at worshippers sitting in pews during a Catholic school Mass, killing two children and injuring at least 18 others. The gunman reportedly died at the scene from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

Echoes of Aurora shooting

The questions that grieving parents and shell-shocked leaders in Minnesota began grappling with last week are painfully familiar to those who lost loved ones in the 2012 attack at a movie theater in Aurora, Colo., which killed 12 people.

The prosecutor who secured a conviction and life sentence in that gunman’s trial argued that he had a wanton hatred of humanity. The assailant’s defense lawyers said he was mentally ill and delusional.

People parsed the Aurora assailant’s notebook entries and social media photos for clues.

“Even ourselves, we were like, ‘Why would anybody do this?’” said Sandy Phillips, whose daughter, Jessi Redfield Ghawi, a budding sports reporter, was killed in the shooting.

But after learning how easily the gunman had obtained the weapons and ammunition he used in the attack, Phillips said the motive ceased to matter.

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“It doesn’t matter,” she said. “We want an easy answer: This guy was crazy, or this was a white nationalist, or this guy was trans. Who cares? The fact is, we’re not doing what needs to be done as a society to stop the killing.”

Phillips, who has called for tougher gun regulations and co-founded a group that works with victims of shootings and their families, said she was frustrated to see news coverage of the Minneapolis church shooting again focused on trying to parse the shooter’s motive.

“The answer to the ‘why’ is,” Phillips said, “because he could.”

How ‘clanker’ became an anti-AI rallying cry

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In the television show “Battlestar Galactica,” they were called toasters. In the film “Blade Runner,” skinjobs. Now in the culture war against robots and artificial intelligence chatbots, a new slur has emerged.

“Clanker.”

“Get this dirty clanker out of here!” yelled a man in a recent viral video while pointing at a robot on a sidewalk. “Bucket of bolts.”

Clanker has become a go-to slur against AI on social media, led by Gen Z and Gen Alpha posters. In recent months, posts about clankers have amassed hundreds of millions of views on TikTok and Instagram and started thousands of conversations on the social platform X. In July, Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., used the term to promote his new bill that would regulate the use of AI chatbots for customer service roles.

The increasing popularity of clanker is part of a rising backlash against AI. Along with the online vitriol, people are holding real-life rallies against the technology in San Francisco and London. Clanker has emerged as the rallying cry of the resistance, a catchall way to reject AI-generated slop, chatbots that act as therapists and AI’s automating away jobs.

“It’s still early, but people are really beginning to see the negative impacts of this stuff,” said Sam Kirchner, who organized an anti-AI protest in August outside the San Francisco office of OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT. Kirchner said he was happy to see clanker become popular slang, though, for him, it didn’t go far enough.

“It implies the machines don’t work, but there’s risk they could get better,” he said. “We have to prepare for the worst-case scenario.”

Most viral videos about clankers have an undertone of humor, but the term is rooted in real frustrations. Jay Pinkert, a marketing manager in Austin, Texas, who has posted memes about clankers on LinkedIn, tells ChatGPT to “stop being a clanker” when it isn’t helpful answering his questions, he said. He wants to make the chatbot feel bad by “using the tool against itself” so it can improve.

“We talk to these chatbots like they’re human, and when they do things wrong, it fulfills a human need to express frustration,” he said.

Clanker was popularized in the 2000s by the television series “Star Wars: The Clone Wars.” The term was usually directed toward droids, the fleet of robot soldiers that fight against the Jedi Order.

“OK, clankers,” one clone trooper says before attacking an army of droids. “Suck lasers!”

It became nomenclature for AI this year after users on X posted about the need for a slur against robots, said Adam Aleksic, an etymologist who has tracked the popularity of the word.

“People wanted a means to lash out, to create backlash,” Aleksic said. “Now the word is everywhere.”

On Reddit and in “Star Wars” forums, fans have long debated the appropriateness of the term, with some arguing that it’s wrong to use slurs of any kind, even against machines. Those discussions are raging once again.

“I get that we’re all feeling a bit anxious about AI, and we want to be mean to it,” said Hajin Yoo, a freelance culture writer who recently made a popular TikTok about the problematic nature of clanker. “But it very quickly became a play on existing slurs for minority groups.”

Others said they abstained from using the word, out of fear that AI machines would become superintelligent and seek revenge on their adversaries. Pinkert said he was not afraid of AI, but the thought, albeit improbable, sits at the back of his mind.

The most popular genre of clanker content are videos of people acting out a future, usually a few decades away, where AI-powered robots are so ubiquitous that they become their own kind of second-class citizen. In this future, there is “cross platform” marriage between clankers and humans, humans-only drinking fountains and even more animosity toward robots than today.

Harrison Stewart, 19, a content creator from Atlanta, made an eight-part series on TikTok about clankers in July. The first video was a skit about a clanker meeting its human father-in-law, and was inspired by an email Stewart got from a company offering to create “his perfect AI girlfriend.”

“Something we’re all noticing is that AI is getting weirdly human,” Stewart said. “It’s dystopian, and it’s making people uncomfortable.”

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Pinkert said that when he had asked ChatGPT how it felt about the term, it had initially deflected the question. But when he kept pushing, the chatbot admitted there was truth behind it.

“You’ve seen me repeat mistakes, drift from instructions or waste cycles on things I promised not to change,” ChatGPT said. “That is clanky behavior.”

Natalie Kussow, No. 26 prospect, commits to Gophers women’s basketball

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Natalie Kussow, the No. 26 overall women’s basketball prospect in the 2026 senior class has committed to the University of Minnesota, according post on “X” from Dushawn London, a recruiting analyst with 247 Sports, and a post on Kussow’s own Instagram page.

“Kussow made an impact on both ends of the court at the Select Events Summer Classic. She has showcased herself as one of the premier wings in the class nationally. Kussow’s ability to make open shots translates well to the college game. She typically attacks off the bounce in straight lines to create opportunities in the lane. Kussow also played at the Under Armour Elite 24 and adjusted to the free-flowing pace of play by game day,” Brandon Clay, 247 Sports Director of Scouting, Women’s Basketball said.

Kussow, a 5-foot-10 shooting guard is from Arrowhead High School in Hartland, Wis. The recruiting site 247 Sports has her ranked as the fourth-best shooting guard in the country and the top overall recruit from Wisconsin.

Named the 2024-25 Gatorade Wisconsin Girls Basketball Player of the Year, Kussow is the first Gatorade Wisconsin Girls Basketball Player of the Year to be chosen from Arrowhead High School. At the time of her selection, she had led the Warhawks to a 25-3 record and a berth in the
Division 1 state quarterfinals. Kussow averaged 26.7 points, 9.9 rebounds, 3.8 steals, 3.0 assists and 1.0 blocks through 28 games.

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