'They didn't have to die' and 'You're not the Messiah'












The damning verdict of the Southport inquiry is the lead for the Daily Mail, the Daily Express, the Sun and the Mirror. "They Didn't Have to Die" is the Sun's headline, after the report found the murders of Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice da Silva Aguiar would not have happened had the killer's parents intervened. The Daily Mirror says the parents of the three young victims have vowed to carry on the fight for change.
Comments by Lord Robertson, the former Nato secretary general, that Britain's leaders have shown a "corrosive complacency" towards defence are the lead in the Financial Times. The paper describes them as a "stinging rebuke" of the prime minister's defence policy.
The Times reports that households are going to be offered free electricity to do their laundry on "sunny weekends". It forms part of measures to help prevent the UK's power grid being swamped with surplus solar energy this summer. The paper says the National Energy System Operator will announce a scheme today to reward customers for using electricity at times when there is an over-supply.
If you're someone who avoids "small talk" because you find it boring – then new research, reported in the Guardian, may encourage you to think again. Academics at the University of Michigan ran a series of experiments to see how people responded to the prospect of a conversation on a topic that they personally considered dull - ranging from stock markets and Vegan diets, to Pokemon and onions. The paper says people consistently found the conversations more interesting than they had predicted - leading one of the researchers to conclude that a sense of connection, rather than the topic of conversation, was the most important thing.
President Donald Trump's deleted AI image - which appeared to depict him as Jesus Christ - is on many of the papers' front pages. Trump claimed he thought he looked like a doctor in the image where he has his hand on the forehead of a sick man. The Daily Star looks to Monty Python for its headline, "You're not the Messiah, you're a very naughty boy", it reads.

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