Hey Folks, It's Friday and this is the Enstars Rundown, where we collect and present to you all the big (and sometimes small) news and pop culture stories floating around online every weekday morning.

So here it we go.

Read This: Orange Is the New Black actor Matt McGorry wrote an amazing essay for Cosmopolitan on how he became a feminist. 

As you probably know, today is the 14th anniversary of Sept. 11. And if you hadn't heard of it before, then you should know about the banking firm Sandler O'Neill & Partners. The company had an office on the 104th floor in the south tower of the World Trade Center and lost 66 employees in the attack. All together those murdered employees left behind 76 children. So the firm's top management created a foundation to pay the full college tuition for each one of them.

In other 9/11-related news, it looks as if al Qaeda has declared war...on ISIS. Hopefully the two terrorist organizations will take care of one another.

Quote of the Day: "Whether it was the third vote or the fourth vote or the fifth vote, they were going to eventually get me," - Former Michigan State Representative Todd Course, who resigned in the early hours this morning, before the legislature could expel him from office for his bizarre scandal in which he sent out a mass email in May attempting to smear himself in an effort to cover up his affair with fellow state representative Cindy Gamrat (who was voted out by the legislature).

A European court has ruled that time spent by some workers traveling to and from their last appointments of the day counts as work. Now before you go and start demanding extra pay from your boss to cover your commute, you should note that this only applies to workers without a fixed office. Sorry, cubicle drones.

2016 Election Update of the Day: Vice President Joe Biden stopped by The Late Show with Stephen Colbert  last night and got emotional about the recent passing of his son Beau while continuing to deter any chance that he'll enter the 2016 presidential race. Biden is the second big political guest for Colbert, who just confirmed that GOP candidate Donald Trump will also be stopping by the show on Sept. 22. Meanwhile, Mike Huckabee, the former Arkansas and current Republican presidential wannabe who's come out as a major supporter of Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis, is getting slammed for his comments in which he tried to equate the Supreme Court's ruling that legalized gay marriage to the infamous Dredd Scott case, which he said was "the law of the land." The case, if you can't remember from history class, ruled that blacks couldn't be American citizens.

Listen to this: The season finale episode of the fantastic history podcast The Memory Palace is a profile of Captain Edward Dwight, the first African American in the U.S. Space Program AND one of the people that President Kennedy initially intended to be the Apollo 11 crew.

Watch This: Chinese villagers use a homemade rocket launcher to fight of a demolition crew.